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The Clay Travis and Buck Sexton Show

Hour 3 - A Detransitioners Story

The Clay Travis and Buck Sexton Show

iHeartPodcasts

Society & Culture, Daily News, News, Politics, News Commentary

4.5 • 11.4K Ratings

🗓️ 20 February 2026

⏱️ 37 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Hour 3 of the Clay Travis and Buck Sexton Show delivers one of the program’s most powerful hours in recent memory, centered entirely on the explosive topic of gender transition, detransitioning, medical malpractice, and parental awareness in the digital age. The hour opens with breaking reaction to President Trump’s press conference following the Supreme Court’s 6–3 decision striking down his earlier tariff authority, but it quickly transitions into an in‑depth interview that drives the bulk of the conversation: a raw, emotional, and deeply troubling firsthand account from 23‑year‑old detransitioner Soren Aldaco, Independent Women ambassador and detransitioner.

Soren recounts how, at just eleven years old, she stumbled into online chat communities through her handheld Nintendo device—spaces that had nothing to do with sex or gender but became early gateways for predators and online influencers who groomed and manipulated her. She describes how her teenage unhappiness, combined with a turbulent home life, made her vulnerable to adults who encouraged her to believe she was “a boy in a girl’s body.” By 15, a psychiatrist affirmed a transgender diagnosis instead of addressing the real roots of her distress. At 17, she was prescribed testosterone after a 30‑minute conversation with a nurse practitioner without parental consent. And by 19, she underwent a double mastectomy—meeting the surgeon for the first time only one week before major, irreversible surgery that was approved and paid for by insurance as “medically necessary.”

Her post‑surgery experience was harrowing: severe complications, blood pooling, wounds reopening, and surgical teams who disappeared when she desperately needed follow‑up care. The final blow came not from the physical pain, but from the economic realization—after seeing how dismissively she was treated—that the gender‑transition industry is a highly profitable, lifelong‑patient model rather than legitimate medical care. She began detransitioning at 19 and is now married and rebuilding her life, but faces permanent physical consequences.

Clay presses the legal implications, especially as Soren explains that her lawsuit was just heard by the Texas Supreme Court. The defendants argue the statute of limitations expired before she could even understand the harms done to her. Clay and Buck use this case to urge lawmakers nationwide to eliminate statutes of limitation for gender‑transition malpractice, stressing that vulnerable minors cannot reasonably grasp the permanence of decisions made under emotional distress, manipulation, or online influence. They argue that doctors, hospitals, and insurers should face civil and criminal accountability for performing irreversible procedures on minors.

The rest of the hour is dominated by passionate reactions from callers—grandparents, parents, former tomboys, and people who watched friends undergo similar transitions—many expressing outrage that a healthy 19‑year‑old can have breasts removed voluntarily while insurance companies refuse to cover standard cosmetic procedures. Clay explains how families are emotionally manipulated by clinicians who say, “Would you rather have a dead daughter or a living son?” and argues this toxic fear‑based framing is pushing parents into decisions they do not fully understand.

The hosts also highlight how the medical establishment, summer camps, schools, and therapists often “socially transition” children without parental consent, normalizing gender changes as acts of kindness when, in reality, they may be misdiagnosing depression, trauma, or isolation. They stress that adolescence is universally confusing, and that many today’s young people who feel discomfort in puberty are being pushed into irreversible medical pathways rather than given time, structure, and emotional support.

The hour closes with additional listener feedback and commentary on the growing number of detransitioners, the emerging lawsuits across the country, and the financial incentives within the healthcare system that keep these procedures alive. Clay and Buck argue that massive lawsuits—like the recent multimillion‑dollar verdicts in transition‑related malpractice cases—will ultimately force hospitals and insurers to end these practices because the financial liability will outweigh the ideological push.

Hour 3 ends with the hosts reiterating the importance of parental vigilance, the dangers of unmonitored online spaces for children, and the need for legislative and cultural pushback against what they call the most alarming medical scandal of a generation.

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Transcript

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0:00.0

This is an I-Heart podcast.

0:02.6

Guaranteed Human.

0:05.3

Welcome in Friday edition of the program.

0:09.3

Buck ducked out last hour.

0:11.0

He's doing a bunch of final minute, kind of, because the first week is so important,

0:17.5

advertisement for his book, Manufacturing Delusion, which we would all encourage you to go get.

0:23.3

It's, I think, the number six book on Amazon right now has a very, very good chance to be at the top of the bestseller list across the country.

0:31.6

Thanks to you guys, Manufacturing Delusion.

0:34.0

You can go buy your copy like I did.

0:36.2

The president of the United States has just ended

0:38.9

his press conference and walked out discussing all of the impacts of today's Supreme Court

0:44.8

ruling on tariffs. If you did not hear, six to three, we'll get into this more, some this hour.

0:51.5

The Supreme Court ruled that President Trump did not have the authority to

0:55.6

implement the tariffs as he had done under the existing legislation. But they did not tell us what

1:02.3

should happen with the tariffs that have been collected so far. They also, in the dissent,

1:07.0

Brett Kavanaugh specifically said, hey, we think he does have the authority if he puts it under

1:12.7

this legislation. Instead, the president has now said he will be doing that. Again, I'll put my

1:19.6

lawyer hat on and discuss some of this going forward with all of you, but a lot of details coming

1:26.4

out there. We are joined now, though, by a woman that I'm excited to have on the program who wrote a really

1:35.8

powerful op-ed in the Wall Street Journal last week, detailing what her life was like as she

1:43.1

got caught in the gender transition medical system.

1:48.4

Beginning at the age of 11, she decided that she was under the tutelage of a lot of different people.

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