Lawmaker: Biden-Harris administration funded painful transgender experiments on animals
Under the previous administration, more than $10 million of taxpayer money was allocated for highly controversial experiments involving transgender monkeys, mice, and rats, a revelation made by Republican Representative Nancy Mace from South Carolina.
Mace did not hold back in her criticism, stating that last year, more than $10 million of taxpayer money was spent to create transgender monkeys, mice and rats, Caliber.Az reports via US media.
"These DEI grants — funded by Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion programs — were used to carry out painful and deadly transgender experiments involving invasive surgeries and hormone therapies on animals at universities across the country,” she explained.
Mace also shared shocking details about one of the experiments, revealing that $2.5 million was spent on studying the reproductive abilities of transgender mice.
“The Biden-Harris administration spent $2.5 million to study the fertility of transgender mice,” Mace emphasized. “They were so eager to push their radical gender ideology that they were surgically altering animal genitals, all funded by taxpayer dollars.”
In addition to these reproductive studies, Mace highlighted other disturbing experiments that investigated the animals’ responses to drug overdoses and their susceptibility to contracting HIV, further stoking public concern.
The controversy surrounding these experiments led to swift action by former President Donald Trump. Upon taking office, he signed a series of executive orders that reversed many of the previous administration's policies. One of the most notable orders halted all federal programs related to diversity and inclusion, while another officially recognized only two genders — male and female — in the US. “We’ve put an end to the radical ideologies that have been pushed on our nation,” Trump said. “We are returning to common sense.”
As part of his broader policy changes, Trump took a firm stance on sex reassignment surgeries, banning funding for procedures on individuals under 19 years old in a move announced on January 29.
By Tamilla Hasanova