Former Navy Seal: becoming transgender "destroyed my life"
Chris Beck was promoted by CNN for being transgender. He has now reversed the transition and is speaking out against the sex change industry.
After 10 years as a trans woman, former Navy Seal Chris Beck is back to being a man. He says the experience "destroyed [his] life." Beck wants to "wake up" America about the reality behind the sex change industry: how it is encouraged, the societal pressure, the lies, especially in regards to minors. He denounced the practice of administering hormone treatments to children.
"As soon as [kids] go in and say, ‘I’m a tomboy’ or ‘This makes me feel comfortable,’ and then a psychologist says, ‘Oh, you’re transgender.’ And then the next day, you’re on hormones – the same hormones they are using for medical castration for pedophiles. Now, they are giving this to healthy 13-year-olds," Beck said in a conversation with Robby Starbuck, recounting his own experience after 10 years.
Healthy children given hormones used to castrate pedophiles
The Navy Seal veteran, who was awarded more than 50 medals and ribbons in his 20 years of service, claims he was "used" by CNN and its anchor Anderson Cooper as propaganda to normalize sex changes. Beck, then was called Kristin, claimed to have felt like a woman but kept it hidden for years. "But as you suppress, and as you bottle it up, it’s not that on the surface. So maybe I could put it back a few different layers. You would never notice it," he explained.
Now, Beck denounces that "I got propagandized. I got used badly by a lot of people who had knowledge way beyond me. They knew what they were doing. I didn’t." The former Navy Seal acknowledged that he was "very naïve" when he participated in the Cooper interview and now feels he was "taken advantage of." Nevertheless, Beck takes "full responsibility" and is speaking out again to the media "trying to correct" his mistake.
"I did it to myself, but I had help"
In Beck's words, the sex change "destroyed my life. I destroyed my life. I am not a victim. I did it to myself, but I had help." This assistance began with Veterans Affairs. In less than an hour, he was offered the hormones to begin his transition.
The real problem for this veteran, is "a billion-dollar industry between psychologists, between surgeries, between hormones, between chemicals, between follow-up treatments. There are thousands of gender clinics throughout the country. And each of those gender clinics is going to bring in probably more than $50 million."