On CBS Sunday Morning, correspondent Susan Spencer was once again wearing her leftist bias on her sleeve when she began arguing with American Principles Project president Terry Schilling over sex change procedures for children. The interview came during a segment on the growing fight between conservatives and leftists on whether children should be allowed to receive puberty blocking and cross sex hormones if they believe they’re the opposite sex.
Spencer kicked her biased questioning into high gear when she wailed at Schilling: "the parents of some of these children would look at you and say if you want to protect kids, leave us alone." This of course is absurd even for Spencer. Why would conservatives who believe children are being abused simply look the other way?
Schilling responded to her asinine question by noting "We are leaving your kids alone. We are the ones that are protecting them from getting sex change procedures and puberty blocking and cross sex hormones."
"And they would say we know better than you do," Spencer screeched.
"I would tell them they don't," Schilling added. To which Spencer interrupted again: "who are you to say that?"
Schilling retorted by educating the Democrat CBS News activist: "I am an American citizen that gets to vote and organize people in politics. When we both disagree, then we go to the American people and make our cases to them and we see who can pass the most laws and right now we’re starting to win."
Spencer would never grill a Democrat like this. As is frequently the case, Democrats get hugs and Republicans receive a proverbial hit over the head from the leftists in the media.
This hostile interview was made possible by Red Lobster. Their information is linked.
The transcript is below:
CBS Sunday Morning
6/18/2023
9:34:16 a.m. EasternSUSAN SPENCER: The parents of some of these children would look at you and say if you want to protect kids, leave us alone.
TERRY SCHILLING: We are leaving your kids alone. We are the ones that are protecting them from getting sex change procedures and puberty blocking and cross sex hormones.
SPENCER: And they would say we know better than you do.
SCHILLING: I would tell them they don't and then we can—
SPENCER: Who are you to say that?
SCHILLING: I am an American citizen that gets to vote and organize people in politics. When we both disagree, then we go to the American people and make our cases to them and we see who can pass the most laws and right now we’re starting to win.