CNN Lets 10-Year Olds Claim Peo­ple Want To Shoot Them For Being Trans­gen­der

CNN Lets 10-Year Olds Claim People Want To Shoot Them For Being Transgender

CNN Nation­al Cor­re­spon­dent Lucy Kafanov has a rain­bow flag emo­ji in her Twit­ter han­dle and was wear­ing rain­bow gloves on Wednes­day, but CNN News­room still thought she was an appro­pri­ate choice to send to the Supreme Court to cov­er oral argu­ments in U.S. v. Skrmet­ti, the case that seeks to answer whether Tennessee’s ban on so-called “gen­der-affirm­ing care” vio­lates the Con­sti­tu­tion. In addi­tion to some hor­rif­i­cal­ly one-sided report­ing, Kafanov also sought to shame Ten­nessee and its sup­port­ers by rolling out 10-year-olds who iden­ti­fy as trans­gen­der to claim that they are in dan­ger of being mur­dered.

To any­one unaware of Kafanov’s activist stance, she quick­ly made it clear which side she sup­port­ed sim­ply by how she described the two sides’ sup­port­ers, “At this moment, it’s a bit of a bat­tle of the loud­ness of the micro­phones. We’re sort of clos­er to the group that is denounc­ing this kind of gen­der-affirm­ing care for minors. Fur­ther down, you see a much larg­er, more col­or­ful group of peo­ple who are sup­port­ing the kids who are at stake in this case.”

She then lament­ed, “Amer­i­cans who iden­ti­fy as trans­gen­der make up less than 2 per­cent of the entire pop­u­la­tion. But espe­cial­ly in this elec­toral cam­paign, they have tak­en on this out­sized role. They’ve become caught in the cross­fires of this cul­ture war and we’ve actu­al­ly been spend­ing time with some of the fam­i­lies and the teenagers and the kids who are– be impact­ed by these bans, by these laws.”

Kafanov then set up an inter­view ses­sion she recent­ly con­duct­ed, “We spent time with three fam­i­lies who trav­eled on their own dime, miss­ing school, miss­ing work to be here in D.C. all the way from Ari­zona to have their voic­es heard because they feel that there are a lot of politi­cians, lawyers, talk­ing heads, dis­cussing their rights, they’re not being heard from them­selves, and I want to give you a sense of what one 10-year old Vio­let DuMont told me when I asked her what it feels like to be a trans­gen­der kid in Amer­i­ca today. Take a lis­ten.”

In a clip, Kafanov asked, “What con­cerns have you had about speak­ing out?”

DuMont replied, “That I’m going to be, like, mur­dered. Like one day I’m going to be walk­ing down the street and some­body’s going to come up and, like, shoot me or some­thing.”

Back live, Kafanov con­tin­ued to bat for those seek­ing to over­turn Tennessee’s law, “And one of the things that all of these fam­i­lies empha­size is gen­der-affirm­ing care, things like hor­mones, puber­ty block­ers, these are deeply per­son­al, inti­mate deci­sions that they are mak­ing with their pedi­a­tri­cians, with their psy­chi­a­trists, with the chil­dren over the course of many, many years.”

Most peo­ple would say that 10-year-olds hav­ing pas­sion­ate opin­ions is not the same thing as pos­sess­ing wis­dom to make pro­found life deci­sions, but Kafanov is not most peo­ple, “These are not, you know, willy-willy deci­sions that they’re mak­ing care­less­ly and for these chil­dren, it’s a chance to be who they tru­ly are. These 10-year-olds told me they have no doubts about their gen­der iden­ti­ty. They are exhaust­ed about hav­ing to con­tin­u­ous­ly defend who they are and to argue for their very right to exist, Jim.”

Host Jim Acos­ta agreed, “Yeah, your heart goes out to those kids when you lis­ten to those com­ments.”

The whole thing was a reck­less bit of “jour­nal­ism” from CNN. There are legit­i­mate ques­tions and con­cerns about giv­ing minors gen­der-alter­ing care. Rais­ing those does not mean you favor shoot­ing any­one and cit­ing chil­dren as experts is just an intel­lec­tu­al­ly lazy way of demand­ing peo­ple shut up.

Here is a tran­script for the Decem­ber 4 show:

CNN News­room with Jim Acos­ta

12/4/2024

10:28 PM ET

LUCY KAFANOV: At this moment, it’s a bit of a bat­tle of the loud­ness of the micro­phones. We’re sort of clos­er to the group that is denounc­ing this kind of gen­der-affirm­ing care for minors. Fur­ther down, you see a much larg­er, more col­or­ful group of peo­ple who are sup­port­ing the kids who are at stake in this case and, look, trans­gen­der Amer­i­cans, Amer­i­cans who iden­ti­fy as trans­gen­der, make up less than 2 per­cent of the entire pop­u­la­tion. But espe­cial­ly in this elec­toral cam­paign, they have tak­en on this out­sized role. They’ve become caught in the cross­fires of this cul­ture war and we’ve actu­al­ly been spend­ing time with some of the fam­i­lies and the teenagers and the kids who are– be impact­ed by these bans, by these laws.

We spent time with three fam­i­lies who trav­eled on their own dime, miss­ing school, miss­ing work to be here in D.C. all the way from Ari­zona to have their voic­es heard because they feel that there are a lot of politi­cians, lawyers, talk­ing heads, dis­cussing their rights, they’re not being heard from them­selves, and I want to give you a sense of what one 10-year old Vio­let DuMont told me when I asked her what it feels like to be a trans­gen­der kid in Amer­i­ca today. Take a lis­ten.

What con­cerns have you had about speak­ing out?

VIOLET DUMONT: That I’m going to be, like, mur­dered. Like one day I’m going to be walk­ing down the street and some­body’s going to come up and, like, shoot me or some­thing.

KAFANOV: That’s a real­ly scary thing to be wor­ry­ing about at ten years old.

DUMONT: Yeah, that should not be a wor­ry.

KAFANOV: Michelle, what’s going through your mind as you hear your daugh­ter say this?

MICHELLE CALLAHAN-DUMONT: It’s just hard to hear her say that.

KAFANOV: And one of the things that all of these fam­i­lies empha­size is gen­der-affirm­ing care, things like hor­mones, puber­ty block­ers, these are deeply per­son­al, inti­mate deci­sions that they are mak­ing with their pedi­a­tri­cians, with their psy­chi­a­trists, with the chil­dren over the course of many, many years. 

These are not, you know, willy-willy deci­sions that they’re mak­ing care­less­ly and for these chil­dren, it’s a chance to be who they tru­ly are. These 10-year olds told me they have no doubts about their gen­der iden­ti­ty. They are exhaust­ed about hav­ing to con­tin­u­ous­ly defend who they are and to argue for their very right to exist, Jim.

JIM ACOSTA: Yeah, your heart goes out to those kids when you lis­ten to those com­ments. Lucy, thank you very much.