flockofseagulls104 wrote: ↑Fri Jan 16, 2026 12:19 pm
So, to the two people that have decided NOT to prove me wrong, I ask you directly:
Can a biological man get pregnant? YES OR NO.
When witnesses testify before a Senate committee, they typically make an opening statement, then each Senator (alternating by party in terms of seniority), has five minutes to question the witness. Depending on how long-winded the questions or answers get, they sometimes ask very few questions in those five minutes. And when most if not all Senators on the committee have a pre-existing point of view about the testimony, the five minutes often becomes less of an effort to elicit genuine information or clarification and more of an effort to tear down or bolster the witness's testimony.
Hawley wasn't interested in the side effects, if any, of the abortion pill or in the doctor's medical or scientific qualifications. He was looking for an answer that would allow him to steer the testimony down a rabbit hole of discussion about transgender issues, a topic that is much less popular with the American public than abortion pills are. And ideally (in Hawley's mind), after his five minutes were up, the next Democratic Senator would spend their five minutes trying to rehabilitate the witness. thus steering the discussion farther and farther away from the issue supposedly at hand, the safety of abortion pills.
Hawley knew this; the doctor knew this; I knew this; and I'm pretty sure Flock knew this since he has headlined most of his responses in this thread "Prove me wrong" in caps and bold letters. That's Charlie Kirk's debating strategy, which was intended to "win" debates by framing questions the way he wanted, putting and keeping his opponents on the defensive, and steering the later portions of the debate along the lines he wanted. The strategy often worked, because his opponents usually weren't skilled debaters. He fared worst in those debates where his opponents were prepared for his tactics. (By the way, in a formal debate which has strict rules, his strategy would never work.You win debates by proving your point rather than challenging opponents to prove their handpicked framing of the issue wrong.)
The doctor knew what Hawley was up to and tried to avoid the trap, rather awkwardly and inartfully. (She's not a skilled debater either.) Whereupon Hawley and his followers, (including Flock and other righties on this Bored), pivoted from a possible subsequent discussion on trans issues into an attempt to tear down the doctor's credibility as a medical and scientific expert. That doctor knows more about the issues she testified about than Hawley, Flock, and everyone else on this Bored (with the probable exception of Weyoun) combined. And I'm very confident that the doctor knows more than RFK Jr.'s handpicked panel of flunky quacks who are promoting junk science to the detriment of the American public. (I would have no qualms whatsoever about visiting this doctor for medical treatment.) And Hawley knew that and I'm pretty sure Flock knows that (although he'll probably defensively react by saying "how dare you claim you know what I'm thinking") Hawley and his followers rather adroitly (and illogically) turned her responses into "proof" her testimony and qualifications were worthless.
So, Flock, take your victory lap, for whatever it's worth. You haven't proved anything about the doctor's qualifications. You haven't proved anything about the safety of abortion pills. You haven't proved anything about any trans issue. The only thing you've "proved" is that Charlie Kirk's tactics sometimes work to obfuscate genuine issues. And in doing so, you've indirectly shown you know less about what you're talking about than several members of this Bored who have treated your nonsense as a serious question and tried to make a serious response that won't leave them open to "gotcha" followups.