459. Texas Children's Hospital Exposed for Illegal Gender Affirming Care | Dr. Eithan Haim
Primary Topic
This episode discusses whistleblower Dr. Eithan Haim's allegations against Texas Children's Hospital for conducting illegal gender-affirming surgeries on children.
Episode Summary
Main Takeaways
- Dr. Eithan Haim, a surgeon, became a whistleblower against Texas Children's Hospital for their illegal gender-affirming surgeries on children.
- After exposing the hospital, Dr. Haim faced significant personal and professional backlash, including being targeted by federal investigations.
- The episode discusses broader societal and medical system issues, highlighting how ideology can influence medical practices and policies.
- Dr. Peterson and Dr. Haim explore the implications of suppressing debate and the critical examination of medical practices.
- The conversation raises concerns about the ethical responsibilities of medical professionals and the potential harm to children from unchallenged medical procedures.
Episode Chapters
1: Introduction and Background
Dr. Haim introduces his background and the initial discoveries of illegal activities at Texas Children's Hospital. Key moments include his description of the hospital's statement of shutting down the transgender clinic, which he knew to be false. Eithan Haim: "I knew that was a lie... I did surgery there."
2: Consequences of Whistleblowing
Discussion on the consequences faced by Dr. Haim post-whistleblowing, including federal charges and personal threats. Jordan B. Peterson: "What do you think they wanted from you at that point?"
3: Ideological Influence on Medicine
This chapter covers the influence of ideology on medical practices, particularly concerning gender-affirming care, and the ethical dilemmas it poses. Eithan Haim: "It's anti language, and it's anti medicine. What this is is not medicine."
4: Legal Battles and Public Reaction
Details the legal battles Dr. Haim faced, the public reaction to his revelations, and the legislative changes that followed. Eithan Haim: "We had to tell this story. A bill got passed."
Actionable Advice
- Educate Yourself: Learn about the medical procedures and their implications before consenting to them.
- Support Whistleblowers: Understand the risks whistleblowers take and support them through advocacy or legal aid.
- Question Authority: Encourage questioning and debate within any professional field to uphold ethical standards.
- Protect Children: Advocate for policies that prioritize the physical and psychological health of children.
- Stay Informed: Keep up with both mainstream and alternative media to get a full spectrum of information on critical issues.
About This Episode
Dr. Jordan Peterson sits down with trauma surgeon and whistleblower, Dr. Eithan Haim. They discuss the Texas Children’s Hospital, their illegal continuation of gender affirming care, the pathology and lies attached to the treatments, and why Dr. Haim blew the whistle when so many in his field remain silent (or worse, lie).
People
Eithan Haim, Jordan B. Peterson
Companies
Texas Children's Hospital
Content Warnings:
Content includes discussions of medical practices that may be considered unethical and illegal; listener discretion is advised.
Transcript
Jordan B. Peterson
Hello, everybody. I had the pleasure and the discomfort as well, of talking with Doctor Itan Haim today, and he is a general and trauma surgeon operating in Greenville, Texas. More relevant to this story, he's come out as a whistleblower recently against the largest children's hospital in the world in Texas, which has been conducting illegal sex change operations, pediatric sex change operations. And if that's not bad enough, after he came out as a whistleblower, the Department of Justice sent federal agents to his house twice, the second time armed, the second time to lay charges against him, which are very likely to prove, shall we say, spurious and motivated. And so that's the state of the medical justice and also psychological communities today in the face of this absolutely catastrophic and pathological onslaught of the gender affirming care radicals.
And so we discuss all that. Join us, Doctor Haim. Start by situating yourself for everybody. Say who you are, where you are in your career, where you're working, where you're located geographically. Just contextualize this for everyone.
Eitan Haim
Yeah. And thank you for having me on. My name is Eitan Heim. I'm a general and trauma surgeon in a small town outside of Dallas. I grew up in Florida.
You have a brother and a sister, two parents, very close with all of them. I went to college in Florida and then medical school there as well. And I did my surgical training at Baylor College of Medicine in Houston, Texas. And this was a big deal for me because it's one of the most prestigious surgery programs in the country. A lot of legendary surgeons have come from that program.
So I started that program in 2018 and was there for five years, until 2023. So I was able to see the world of medicine surgery before COVID and the transgender insanity, and then afterwards. So I had a unique perspective because I was at the bottom of the rung during this time, and it had completely changed my life, changed the way that I perceived medicine in the world around me. And it was during my time at this residency program, where we rotate at a few different hospitals. So the program is Baylor College of Medicine, but we'll rotate a few different hospitals, one of those being Texas children's Hospital, which is the largest children's hospital in the world.
One of the best hospitals, too. So you spoke in that brief description of the dawning transgender insanity. Now, those are pretty harsh words. And you said you were in a very unique position to be able to observe that, and that was associated to some degree with COVID So do you want to flesh that out a bit? What exactly did you see happening.
Jordan B. Peterson
And why do you refer to it in those terms? Yeah, because. So when you're a surgical resident, you're at the very bottom of the totem pole of these big teams that take care of a bunch of patients. So all the grunt work is done by the residents, talking to these patients, doing the consents, seeing them every single day. And these are these big county hospitals, these big children's hospitals.
Eitan Haim
So when I started in 2018, this was, like, the apex of american medicine, where people would be taken to the operating room, cut from the sternum to the belly, have their entire aorta replaced if they had disease, and these people would go home. I was able to see this, and it was amazing. This is what I always dreamed of doing, because my dad's a doctor. He would tell me stories. During that time, there was vigorous debate about issues in medicine and surgery.
We have these meetings every week where we. We would discuss these topics, and we would discuss them freely. We would have these different points of view that were fleshed out in really rigorous ways. But in 2020, all that changed, and this was, again the time where I was at the bottom of the totem pole. It was my second year in training.
It was in March of 2020 that everything had changed, where the medical profession and really, the. Our society's institutions had been transformed, I think, in two ways. Where they had, instead of pursuing medicine based on morality and evidence and science, it was based on ideology. And what I mean by that is this belief that truth is subjective, that it's not reflective of the objective world, right? So that something is true if you say it's true, not because you can observe it or record it or measure it, all you have to do is just say it's true.
And this is a problem when you see it in a college classroom, but it's totally different thing when it's guiding the interventions that you're recommending for patients. And that's what happened during COVID with the masks, the lockdowns, the social distancing. None of this was ever based on any type of scientific thought. It was simply because someone said it, and everyone believed in it. But the second component that changed was censorship.
The ideology had taken hold, but no one was able to question it. No one was able to debate it because of the censorship. It happened in the media, it happened in the news, but in academic medical centers, I can attest that this is where the effect was most powerful, where if you questioned anything, you would have the most severe repercussions to your job, to your future, to your opportunities, everything. So a lot of people saw that in, like, this very kind of birds eye level. But I was in the hospital.
I saw how people would die alone. They would suffer for weeks in the hospital, and then the last day they're alive, there's no one in the room with them except for me. And I would see them pass away like this and suffer. And the most important people in their lives were not there, and then they have to live with that guilt. But the worst thing I saw is what was happening to the children, because when these lockdowns were happening, you know, we would see bad cases of abuse before, but the abuse we saw afterwards was the most shocking thing I've ever seen, where you would have kids come in so frequently because they weren't in school.
The signs of abuse weren't being picked up. So it's like during that time that became very familiar with the sound a mother makes when you tell her that her child is dead. That's a horrifying thing. So that was my first few years of training. Let me summarize that just to make sure that we've got it.
Jordan B. Peterson
So the case you're making, you talked about the dawn of something approximating a subjective theory of truth, and you say that things really changed in March 2020, and then you make a causal claim. You said that in the throes of the pandemic lockdown, there were medical. Hypothetically medical practices that were implemented that weren't based on evidence at all. The social distancing, for example, and the use of masks. And if you oppose that, the introduction of a very strict form of censorship.
And your sense is that that actually changed medical culture quite dramatically and quite suddenly and maybe quite comprehensively. And you saw that extend to the degree where we were allowing or hospitals were allowing or insisting that people who were ill suffered and died alone because they weren't allowed to see their loved ones, and. And that perverted the entire medical enterprise. And then you said that you also saw the dramatic effects of that. Of the lockdown practices on children who, I presume were exposed to more abuse, partly because they weren't.
That wasn't being monitored by schools, but also partly, I would imagine, that the additional economic stress and sheer proximity, that two children that was produced by the lockdowns also exaggerated the conditions that would lead to abuse to begin with. So then maybe you'll tell us how that ties into the transgender insanity, because that's the next step, right? So, okay, so you saw a perversion of the medical enterprise that you believed was quite profound. Now, why do you think you experienced that more dramatically in some sense? Because you were at the bottom of the medical hierarchy at that point.
Why do you think that gave you a particularly insightful viewpoint? And the reason is because we would see these people every single day. The ones who would have to make the phone calls to the families was us. The people who would stay after and talk to the patients was us. The breakdowns these people would have were experienced by us.
Eitan Haim
We would see all the worst parts of it. And so, yeah, that, I believe, laid the groundwork. Because when you have the entire medical establishment, every doctor who participates in this, they adopt this sin, the shame, because everyone knows it's wrong, but everyone's doing it. It's kind of like you prepare them for what's next, because if they don't speak out on that, then they're not going to speak out on anything else. And it's in that environment.
Because the transgender thing, if you remember, was always there. Like the jazz Jennings, he was like ten years before that. But it was after Covid, where the only way this becomes as universal, as institutional as it has now is if doctors don't say anything. Because what these people are proposing has zero therapeutic rationale. And that goes before evidence that's upstream from evidence.
Like if I take out an appendix, I take out someone's gallbladder, a colon mass, because I think it's a tumor. I have to have a logic, a rationale. I have to be able to identify a problem, make sure that the risks, that the benefits outweigh the risks. Because whatever intervention where applying, you have to do that calculus. But in this case, with these transgender interventions, there's none of that.
The only way it happens is if doctors don't say anything about it, don't point out how completely insane what they're doing truly is. And it was after that, around 20, 22, 23, that you saw the transgender ideology proliferate. It was like a wildfire right where you saw it. Yeah. So that's an interesting.
Jordan B. Peterson
Well, it's an interesting hypothesis to see. I hadn't considered the fact that acceptance of the lockdown lies, especially on the medical side, and the emergence of that cancel culture around any criticism set the stage for the next sequence of lies. I mean, there's other causal reasons, I presume. I read a PDF a while back that was prepared by a marketing agency that described the growth opportunities on the transgender treatment front, the so called gender affirming side of medicine, which that gender affirming phrase, that's like one of the most manipulative lies I've ever heard in my life. It goes along with the legislation to forbid so called conversion therapy, which I, as a therapist, know that nobody has been doing for, like, 70 years.
That was a complete bloody lie right from the beginning. And the idea that this care is gender affirming is. It's the antithesis of the truth. And so your claim is part of the reason that spread so quickly was because there was a culture of compliance and silence that had already established itself firmly in the medical community. Can you think of any other reasons?
Have any other reasons occurred to you to account for why this new idea, which is so utterly insane? Right? I think it's Joseph Mengele level of insanity. I've never seen the medical and psychiatric community do anything worse in my entire life than what's been happening with so called gender affirming care. And so what other reasons do you know that made this occurred?
Eitan Haim
So. And just one more thing about what you say for the language. Yeah. So it's anti language, right? It's not just a euphemism.
It's not just a few degrees. It's not a few degrees off from the truth. It's not oriented towards the truth. It's oriented towards the exact opposite. It's a complete lie.
Jordan B. Peterson
It's an anti truth. It's an anti truth. It's anti language, and it's anti medicine. What this is is not medicine completely. It's diametrically opposed to reality and to the truth.
You bet. It's really something to see. And, like, as you are implying, most lies are just slightly off kilter. Right? That's how people get away with them.
But there are specific forms of lies that are diametrically opposed to the truth, and they're obviously insanely pernicious. And that's exactly the situation with so called gender affirming care. Okay, so what did you start seeing? You talked about the kids that you'd seen who'd been damaged by the COVID lockdowns and the increase in abuse. But that's a separate issue apart from the establishment of the culture that we're describing.
That's a separate issue from the issues surrounding gender affirming care, which is at the heart of the matter that you're concerned with. Okay, so lead us into that. Five below means hot stuff, cool prices, and the best kind of fun anywhere. The trends you see all over your feed can be yours for way less than the rest. Like, can't keep in stock.
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Shop over 1600 stores nationwide and fivebelow.com. Yeah. So it was around 2021, 2022. Everything with COVID is happening, and I'm a part of it. Right.
Eitan Haim
So there's a part where I've adopted this shame. I know this is wrong. I know these people are being harmed. I know that what medicine is doing is wrong and people are losing things that can never be taken back, and that I'm a part of that because I was playing a role in it. I mean, I tried to fight back everywhere I could, but in my inside, I knew that there was a sense of shame within me.
But then it was during that time that the transgender issue proliferated. It became nationwide, worldwide. And you think that these things are happening in Washington state, Oregon, New York, California, but you don't think it's happening in Texas. So the story starts in March of 2022, where I was still a resident. The hospital, Texas Children's Hospital, had issued a public statement unequivocally saying they were going to shut down their transgender clinic because of potential criminal liability.
And that last port is important because they acknowledged that issue, potential criminal liability. The reason they released that statement in March of 2022 is because a few weeks before, the attorney general of Texas, Ken Paxton, had issued an opinion saying that these interventions could be investigated as child abuse, which they are. So makes sense why the hospital would release that statement. Right? They need to protect themselves, avoid this criminal liability.
So they say, we're shutting down the program. And I knew that that was a lie. Unequivocally. The reason I knew that is because I worked there. I did surgery there.
The people who were doing these procedures had told me they were doing these procedures. So over the next couple of months, people I worked with had told me that, man, I just implanted some publocking device in some 11, 12, 13 year old kid who believes they're transgender. And I thought, man, that's odd to released this statement a few weeks, you know, a few weeks before, a few months before. So I thought maybe this maybe like a few holdover cases, maybe they were scheduled beforehand. I didn't believe it.
It just seemed so absurd that the hospital would be lying about something like this. I just didn't think it was possible. Right. So over the next couple of months, it just gets worse and worse, more and more frequent, wherever becoming more frequent. But also, the stories are getting crazier where you have these kids with tons of psychiatric issues.
All those are being ignored, and they're just getting these drugs, whether blockers hormones to affirm their gender. But I still didn't believe. It took me months, but then it was January of 2023 that all doubt was gone, because it was during that time that the directors of the program, the transgender program, the one that supposedly did not exist, were given the opportunity to speak at the hospital's most prestigious lecture series. It's called grand rounds. This is a lecture that's given every single week.
It's like, demonstrates the priorities of the hospital. So you have the directors of the transgender program who are talking to the entire department, talking about their algorithmic approach to the hormones and the blockers, advising general pediatricians to ask about gender identity behind the backs of their parents, talking about fertility preservation in 1112 year old kids, talking about mastectomies when kids get a little bit older.
That was mind blowing. But then even there was, a few weeks after that, there was a Zoom conference with a few members of the transgender program with a group of 150 medical students. Like a public Zoom conference where you had one of the social workers who talked about how they actively concealed the existence of the program from governing state bodies, governing medical bodies, by saying instead of documenting consoles or giving documentation to parents, she would defer documentation. Like, just call in consults or just tell parents. The reason is to not leave a paper trail.
So these people were explicitly talking about how they were hiding this program. How did you get access to that Zoom call? Because they were public. The entire medical school, it was a medical student group who put on this conference so anyone could join. There were, like 150 people there.
And the grand rounds. I see. Yeah. The Graham rounds lectures are open to every person at Texas children's, every person at Baylor. So you have, like, hundreds, if not like, over a thousand people who know the hospital said one thing, but they're doing the exact opposite, opposite thing behind closed doors.
And so it took me months to make that conclusion because it's just so insane. Shockings. Right? Right. Of course.
Jordan B. Peterson
Of course. Well, you know, I talked to Michael Schellenberger after he broke the W path files, and. And Michael is obviously a journalist who. He broke the Twitter files, too, him and Tybee and Barry Weiss, I think, was involved in that, too. So he's not a coward.
And he told me when we discussed the WPAtH revelations that he had watched, and Abigail Schreier and I talk about her book, irreversible damage and the harm that gender affirming care. God, I just. I can't even use those words. Is doing to children. And he said that he couldn't believe it.
It took him two years. It took him two years to admit to what might be going on. And, you know, it's obvious that you were suffering from the same conundrum, and it's not that surprising, right? Because watching something like that unfold is the sort of thing that makes you question your own sanity because you're forced into a position where you think, well, either I'm seeing what's going on, and a thousand people are ignoring it, even though it seems extremely pathological and illegal and anti medical and immoral, and that that's casting a dim light on the entire profession. Or you're going to wonder if maybe there's something wrong with the way you're looking at the world.
And both of those are really stark and terrible choices. And so it's not surprising it took you a number of months before you would even fully admit to what was going on. What was your emotional state like at that point. You really look at who you are, right? Like, who am I as a person?
Eitan Haim
Right? Am I really a doctor? Am I a surgeon? Because that was, like, the question. That was a question that was going through my mind.
I never thought about. I never answered that question before, but because everything that happened during COVID I was so angry. Every day I was angry. And my wife would tell me, like, eitan, you're angry. My parents would tell me, you're angry.
And I'm, like, a very not angry person by disposition. Like, I never have been angry in the operating room. And that's saying something for a surgeon to not be angry in the operating room. But I was angry because I hated to see what was happening to these people, to these kids, to even these adults, everyone, because everyone was taking on these lies, but people were being harmed by it. People were dying alone.
These kids were suffering, and I was seeing it every single day. So when I would come home, I was angry. But what I realized is that I was angry with myself, because even though I'm at the bottom of the totem pole, I still have a responsibility. If I'm a doctor, I'm a surgeon, I have to do something, because my dad's a doctor, and he always told me, you have to take care of your patients. That's the most important thing above anything else.
But he also said, you have to take care of the profession. You have to be a good doctor. You have to represent yourself well. And I thought about everything he had told me in was I representing medicine like surgery? Like, was I being a doctor?
In that moment, I thought, if I don't do something about this, I could never live with myself. You have the biggest children's hospital in the world lying to the public about a program that is manipulating, mutilating, and sterilizing young children. You have probably hundreds, if not a thousand, people who know about it, and I know about it. So if I didn't do something right for. My wife's pregnant.
My kids, she's due in October. My first girl, she's gonna be a daughter when she grows up and she looks back, what is she gonna think of her father if I didn't do something and just let this happen? Because she's gonna know. So I thought I had to do something. And that was in January of 2023, where I thought, the reason I'm angry is because the shame within myself for not doing something so right.
I knew that there were risks. I knew that there were things to fear, but there's something greater to fear rather than the consequences within this world. Okay, so I've got three questions. Like, how many kids and adults do you think were affected by this so called care during that time?
Jordan B. Peterson
How did you come to the conclusion about what to do? Because that's not straightforward, right? Not at all. And then what do you think was the highest, the higher order issue that was at hand, that was compelling you to both feel guilty and to speak. Do you mind if I answer those in reverse order?
Sure. Yeah. So, in medicine, just like in anything else, the only way to live appropriately is to orient yourself by the truth. To live by the truth. There's nothing you can get away with.
Eitan Haim
If you lie, you're going to pay for it. So that's the higher order principle that was, in my mind, that was driving that. But also that. But number two is something more physical, more granular, is that there were kids being harmed, that I could do something about it. There were children who are an imminent threat of being harmed.
So how many? How many? Second question. A lot. I can't necessarily give you the exact numbers because what I saw was limited.
Maybe probably hundreds. A lot. A lot. But then your first question is, so I have this information, right. I have to orient myself towards truth.
Right. In order to live, but also to fix this problem. There's kids who are going to be hurt, and I have the information, but what do I do about it? Like, I'm a no one, right? I'm like, I don't have social media.
I'm very private. I live in a very small town now. So I thought, well, we have to find someone who can do something about this. So we just started reaching out to anyone, everyone, anyone who might do something about it. So it took us five months to get a hold of someone who would take this story.
And we reached out, like tons of emails. I just sent emails, like, emails to dozens of people who's us? You said us. Well, in terms of. Yeah, me.
Jordan B. Peterson
Yeah. Okay, fine, fine. I just wonder. Well, the reason I asked. Well, the reason I asked is because, and this is useful maybe for anybody watching and listening, is that one of the things that's useful to do if you ever find yourself in a situation like this is to see if there's a couple of other people around that you can trust, that you can ally with, because it's relatively easy to fire one person, but it's.
And to pillory them. But it's. It's a lot harder to do that with two and it's probably impossible to do it with four, so. But you were doing this. You were doing this alone.
And why do you think you had to do it alone? Because the american academic medical system is like East Germany. Like, no joke. If there was a colleague who kind of thought the same way, we would physically go to dark, quiet corners and talk about these things. Right.
Eitan Haim
But no, no, there is a culture of censorship and fear that is very, very real. And I can attest to it because I was there, I lived through it. It's unimaginable. So no one's going to do anything like this. And I wouldn't want to necessarily involve people because especially we sacrifice so much to get to that point.
Many people would be. That's why it's so easy for doctors to say, I'm just not going to do anything, I'm going to stay silent. But their calculus is incorrect. So, yeah, it was during that time, I just would send emails to news organizations I thought would be receptive to the story or journalists. Took me five months because I think people just didn't believe me.
Jordan B. Peterson
Well, that may be part of the reason. The other part of the reason might be that they're in a culture that's the same as yours, you know, because it's shocking. Look, I know what you're saying already to some degree. I mean, I'm being investigated by my college in Ontario for daring to question the gods of the transgender movement, primarily. And so I know how pernicious and pervasive this is, but I don't know the extent of it.
And it could easily be that if it's a movement of silence that's infiltrated the medical and the psychological communities, that it's no better in the world of, especially in legacy media. In fact, maybe it's worse, and that could easily be the case. So who did you reach out to, just out of curiosity? And then who finally responded? Yeah.
Eitan Haim
So I won't say the names of the organizations, but these are the conservative organizations who would take a story like this. So I want to be.
I want to have a degree of charitable. It's charitable, yeah. Because they may have not believed me. They had other things going on. I get it.
I'm just some random guy who's emailing him a bunch of times, probably think I'm some weirdo. So. Yeah. But then after months, I finally get in touch with Christopher Ruffo in, like, early to mid May of 2023, and he demonstrated some interest in the story. So we go through the vetting process to make sure I'm not, you know, I'm a real person.
I'm a surgeon. I work there. That story is true. And it was the perfect timing because I didn't know this at the time, but the Texas Senate was voting on the bill to ban these interventions in the state of Texas, like, a week later. So we go through this process to get the story ready, and then the story comes out on May 16, 2023, and blows up in the news.
It's everywhere. I think you even retweeted about it, if I remember correctly. But the story does exactly what we hoped it would do. Right? I was the anonymous whistleblower.
No one knew my name. The story had outlined how the hospital had lied to the public and not only continued the program, but expanded it behind closed doors. Within 24 hours of that story coming out, the Texas Senate passed that bill with bipartisan support, banning the interventions that we had exposed. And it was passed with bipartisan support, partly because our story came out the day before, because there were multiple Democrats who didn't know this kind of thing was happening in their districts. And the reason I know that is because I spoke with the guy who wrote that law, and he had told me that they had printed out physical copies of our story and handed out to every single member of the Texas Senate.
So within 24 hours of our story coming out, the conduct we had exposed was voted to become illegal in the state of Texas. Yeah, well, it was probably the case, too, that the Democrats that you're speaking of. And the Republicans as well, were also very loath to believe this. Ive talked to many Democrat congressmen and senators, especially at the federal level, and especially the Republicans are often blind to whats really going on, lets say, in higher education, in the medical schools, for example, they're ten years behind the time or 15 years behind the time. But the Democrats are, I would say, willfully blind to the pervasiveness and danger of the radicals that are within their midst.
Jordan B. Peterson
They say, for example, that when someone like Kamala Harris says equity, that all she means is equality of opportunity, which is complete bloody rubbish. She uses a different word. And if she's not smart enough to know the difference, then she's too stupid to be vice president, that's for sure. And if she does know the difference, then she's too ideologically corrupt to even be a proper citizen of the United States. And so she's damned if she does and damned if she doesn't, as far as I'm concerned.
And the fact that the modern Democrats enable that kind of idiot ideology is it's unforgivable, as you can see, in consequence of the trans catastrophe, because it is a catastrophe. Okay, so you got ahold of Chris Rufo, and he brought the story forward. You're anonymous at this point. It makes a legislative difference what happens at the hospital. Bring us forward from May 2023.
Eitan Haim
So I'm anonymous at this point. No one knows who I am. I'm so busy with surgery, it's like nothing even happened. A few days after that, another whistleblower comes out, someone who worked in the transgender clinic, who actually worked with these doctors and was horrified by what was happening. So this person comes out in another story released by Christopher Ruffo.
A few days later, the attorney general, a few days after that, announces an investigation to the hospital. And then about a week and a half after, the CEO of Texas children says that he's going to shut down the program in accordance with SB 14. After that, everything goes quiet. That was May of 2023. I was getting ready to finish my residency, my surgical training, because that was my chief year of the program.
Jordan B. Peterson
So you're doing all this while you're not even completely finished your medical training. So this really is your introduction into modern medicine as it's practiced currently. I can't believe. I can't imagine how demoralizing that would be. But it's for that reason that I did it right.
Eitan Haim
It's because of I was seeing what was happening. Of course someone has to do something about it, because if I want to pass on a career, a profession to my children, a world to my children, I have to do it when it's the most difficult thing to do, right? It's like, what options did I have? So, of course, you know, but it's kind of funny you say that, because it was on the day of my graduation from surgical training that the next part of this story where it gets really wild, because five weeks later, the day I'm graduating from surgical training, one of the most important days of my life, right? You spend all this time sacrificing.
You miss all these important events. So it's a Friday, June 23. We have the ceremony in a couple of hours, about to meet with my family. My wife and I are just getting ready in our apartment, when all of a sudden, I get an aggressive knock on the door. I think, man, that's weird.
Like, who could this be? So I shuffle over, I open it, and standing outside are two federal agents with health and human services. They show me their badges and tell me that they're investigating a case regarding medical records. So in that moment, everything just. You freeze, right?
Your mind just shuts down. But in the back of my mind, like, in my cerebellum somewhere, I just knew they were there to make an example out of me. Because I was anonymous. We were able to tell this story. A bill got passed.
Another whistleblower came out. They had to shut down the program. If I was able to do this, how many other people were able to do this? Right. It was a challenge to the dominant political ideology.
Of course, I knew that's kind of what was going on, but you freak out in the moment. So I'm vitamin five. Below means hot stuff, cool prices, get the trends in your feed for way less candy, beauty, tech room decor, and more. Plus, extreme value finds in our five beyond shop. Yep.
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You could say we're kind of a big deal. Shop in stores and fiveballone.com. So we sit down, and they want to. So you figured that out right away. You basically figured that out right away.
Jordan B. Peterson
How the hell did they know who you were, given that the story had broke anonymously? Well, they had most likely used a huge amount of federal resources to pursue this investigation. In that time, to find out it was me, they had to mobilize the agents, do an investigation right, find all their evidence. Surveil me to find out when I was going to be home. Surveil me to find out when I was graduating, find out where my address was, and then come to my home a few hours before I was graduating.
Eitan Haim
So, you know, it's like, when you. Think they timed that, do you think they. Do you think they timed that to coincide with your graduation? And also, who is they, as far as you know? Like, obviously, the hospital wouldn't be very happy with you because they had to shut down this program.
Jordan B. Peterson
And then there are people pulling the strings behind the scenes to keep the program going. But who do you believe or perhaps know was behind the investigation into the whistleblowing? Well, you know, who runs health and human services and the FBI and the different legal organizations, right, that want to see this pursued? So, yeah, you have the most powerful people in the country who I believe are behind this. And I think the timing was exactly what they were intending because they have to use the value of that accomplishment, the meaning of that day, as their method to extort the threat.
Eitan Haim
They have to use that as the extortion for my compliance because they know I'm starting my career. In order to preserve that, they need to do that so that I comply with them. I admit to something that never happened so that I can participate in some phony investigation and then close the door permanently for other whistleblowers in the country. But as they're coming to find out, they knocked on the wrong door because that day we decided to fight. But when they were setting up their little tripod to do an interview, my wife comes out.
She was getting ready. And luckily, my wife is a brilliant attorney. She's actually an assistant us attorney at the Department of Justice. So my wife works at the Department of Justice. She's a lawyer in the northern district of Texas.
She had been hired at the time. And that's an important point later in the story. Just kind of put that in the back of your mind. But she comes out and we both look at each other, and we'd say, bad idea. We go to our bedroom, and we both say, you know what?
Not a good idea to speak with them without an attorney present. We go back out of and we tell them we won't speak with them further. They say, okay. They pack up their things. Before leaving, they hand me a target letter, and it's just a piece of paper that says, I am a potential target of a criminal investigation.
And it's signed by a assistant us attorney in the southern District of Texas. So we knew that a few minutes after that door opened, the door closes. Our lives are going to be changed forever because we had a choice, just like before. Do we fight back? Do I fight back?
Do I submit to this ideology? Do I compromise everything I believe in, everything I believe my profession to be? Do I compromise? What was happening to these children? There was no question.
There was no way I would allow that to happen. You know, I decided to fight that day, and we've been fighting ever since. What do you think? What do you think they wanted from you? Like they presumed, I imagine, or knew that you were the whistleblower at that point.
Jordan B. Peterson
And they came using these very sophisticated, I would say, and well thought through intimidation tactics. Extraordinarily well timed, I would say sadistically well timed. And. But you've already broken the story, and so you've done most of the damage that you could do, arguably. What do you think they wanted from you at that point?
Eitan Haim
Fear and compliance. Because they needed. Right. It's like, it's not the typical justice system, right, where it's these people who are actually pursuing the truth in order to obtain justice. This is the exact opposite.
When you become a target of a corrupt justice system investigation, people believe that when you comply, when you give in to them, you're actually going to make it better for yourself. But it's the exact opposite because it's their virtue, it's the truth that they are targeting. You believe that your participation, if you're innocent, will exonerate you. But it's the exact opposite. It's because you're innocent, because you're virtuous, that they're targeting you in the first place.
And I knew that at that point because I was able to see all these investigations over the previous couple of years where this was happening. So at that point, I already had the framework in my mind, like, this is a corrupt department of justice. What kind of investigations are you referring to that you had seen over the previous years? If you think about the main political investigations into political opponents of the Democratic Party over the past four years. So, for example, if you look at anyone who spoke out during COVID if you look at Douglas Mackey, if you look at the abortion protest.
Jordan B. Peterson
Bhattacharya. Yeah. Bhattacharya. If you look at the abortion protesters who are being sent to prison for 1020 years for the face act, for sitting in front of a clinic, right. Your compliance does not exonerate you.
Eitan Haim
Right. It's because of your innocence, because of your virtue that you're being targeted in the first place. So I knew that it was obvious. So I still don't exactly understand what. Okay, say they wanted your compliance, but compliance with regard to what?
Jordan B. Peterson
For you to retract your accusations. You're telling me that you knew that complying wasn't going to help you, but I still don't understand exactly what they hope to accomplish other than to intimidate you and to stop other whistleblowers. Is that the gist of it? And, you know, that's actually a really good question because compliance towards what? I believe they needed me to comply.
Eitan Haim
Right. In order to admit to a crime, to grovel at their feet and to issue some meeting, you know, some. Some fake apology for doing the right thing. So basically tell outline for us what exactly the charges were. So.
Jordan B. Peterson
I see. So they brought these charges forward to you, and the presumption was that possibly you could admit to them, hypothetically, that would mean things would go easier for you, which is completely not true, but then it would also discredit you and serve as an object warning to anybody who was going to pull the curtain back in the future. Okay, so what exactly did they accuse you of? So at that point, completely unclear. And that where.
Eitan Haim
That's where it goes into the next part of the story. But I think it's. Yeah, it's the point where they needed to make an example out of me. They needed to make me into a criminal. Right.
Because if they could do that, of course, they shut the door permanently to every other whistleblower in the healthcare system in our country. They shut it permanently. Well, and they discredit you, too. Exactly right. And that's going to be very convenient because you could imagine that Ken Paxton, for example, and the rest of the Texas Republicans aren't going to take the rebellion of the Texas children's Hospital and their lies lying down.
Jordan B. Peterson
So you play a pivotal role in that. Their best strategy is to discredit you and turn you into a criminal, obviously. Okay, so continue with the story. Let it continue to unfold. Yep.
Eitan Haim
So after that, what do we do? Right. So my wife and I, we had the graduation. We go on our patio and we celebrate. So we put on Vietnam war music, we open a bottle of champagne and we celebrate, because at that point, what you do.
And good for you. So you went on with the celebration, of course. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Okay. And it was kind of one of those moments where you look back and you're like, oh, my God.
Like, that's completely insane. But, like, what else could you do, right. When. When the federal government comes knocking on your door. Right.
You have to fight back. Well, I also think when you're shocked, when you're shocked like that, you tend to revert to what would be typical in habitual behavior, you know, because you don't know what else to do. I mean, what the hell do you do when the feds come knocking at your door because you've blown the whistle on people in your. In your children's hospital who are mutilating kids? Like, that's a nightmare.
Jordan B. Peterson
That's really beyond comprehension. And so it's not like you're going to know how to react. Yeah. And it was at that point that where it's like, once you cross the Rubicon, you know, you're no good. You're never going to go back to that life that you become this new person.
Eitan Haim
You're entering this unknown world where you don't know what it's going to be. It's like complete darkness, but you have faith it's the right place to go. So we got in touch with our attorneys through Christopher Rufo. Brilliant people. Marcella Burke.
She's amazing. She's a fighter. So we knew she was the right person for the case. Over the next couple of months, we go into, like, this state of legal purgatory where we have no idea what's going on, what they're investigating, anything, because, right. We had exposed that the hospital was lying.
They were doing something that they acknowledged held criminal liability. Right. It's like, I'm a whistleblower. I had made this public. A law got passed within 24 hours.
Like, what could they be potentially doing? But it was over the next six months that the corruption we saw coming from the Department of Justice was so severe that I had no choice but to take this story public because I had no intention of doing this. We moved to a very small town, and I work in an even smaller town. We just wanted to get on with our lives, have a family, you know, operate on my patients and take care of them. But it was during those six months where we knew that I would be destroyed if I stayed silent.
And that's why I took my story public. But to outline that a little bit more after I took my story public in January of 2024, six months after my attorneys had sent a letter to Congress outlining that misconduct. Um, in a letter to Jim Jordan, and just to give you an example of a few things, you know. Oh, yes. So the misconduct.
Jordan B. Peterson
You're speaking of the misconduct. Sorry. You're speaking of the misconduct of the Department of Justice officials specifically? Yeah. Yeah.
Okay. And the misconduct you're referring to is, does, is it limited to their intervention in your case and their ill defined threats towards you? Or were there more things you said that you became aware of more corruption, so obviously they came to intimidate you with ill formed and false charges. And obviously, that's bad enough. But you alluded to the fact that you discovered other things as well.
Eitan Haim
Yeah. Well, it was the interactions between my attorney and my attorneys and the prosecutor. And it was so shocking that my attorneys felt obligated to blow the whistle themselves in this letter. So it was, for example. Okay, yeah.
So the prosecutor, you know, in this letter says that she was gonna bring me into a jury trial even if she was gonna lose, even on a technicality. And what that means is, if there's no crime, then you just pursue it if you're gonna lose. The implication being, right, the belief is that they're doing this to an innocent person because I had blown the whistle. Right. So they were essentially telling us this.
They had threatened my wife. My wife was undergoing a background check for the Department of Justice. And during those instances in this letter, it says that one of the first things I was brought up was that she says, well, you know, I'm surprised Andrea would interfere with an investigation like this. You know, she won't have any problem. She won't have any issues unless she continues to become a problem.
And what she was referring to was my wife advising me of my constitutional rights. Not only that, you know, it's also saying I had no right to blow the whistle. That for, you know, my job as a doctor, it was not my job to blow the whistle on what was happening. That if I had an issue, I should have just stood outside with a sign. And it was over those months where I made the conclusion, these people are going to come after me no matter what.
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Shop in stores and fiveballone.com dot do. Well, you said something very relevant is, like I told you earlier, that Schellenberger had a hard time believing what Schreier and I had discussed. And then I've also. And so that just shows you how difficult it is for people to believe what's actually going on. But then also, it's the case that when someone like you pops up, or arguably someone like me, say, in relationship specifically to the Ontario College of Psychologists, it's a lot easier for everyone to assume that you're a troublemaker or that I'm a troublemaker.
Jordan B. Peterson
That there's something fundamentally wrong with us and that the institution that we're criticizing couldn't possibly be that corrupt. And like, that impulse to demonize the whistleblower is valid when institutions are mostly sane and have integrity. And our institutions were mostly sane and had integrity until quite recently. And what that also implies is that it's very hard for anyone to overcome their suspicion of, let's say, someone like you. When I first heard about your case in detail, I had tweeted you out a year ago or so, as you pointed out.
But I became more aware of what was going on with you again in recent months. Theres this little part in the back of my mind thinking, oh, this guy, hes probably just a troublemaker. Hes probably just a narcissist, because even though I know that, that could well be not true, and I have more reason to know that than most people. And so what that also implies is that moving ahead with a case against you is perfectly, it's a perfectly logical strategic move, even if they know you're innocent and if it's doomed to failure, because the mere fact that you'll be dragged through the courts is enough to have 25% of people, or 50% of people write you off as probably a criminal. Where there's smoke, there's fire, there's no way you would be being prosecuted if you hadn't done something wrong.
So it's a very smart strategy. Yeah. And especially, it's especially smart because there's going to be no consequences for them. Right. They can bring this case.
Eitan Haim
Right. It's based on nothing. And they will become princes and princesses in this new empire of lies. Right. Their loyalty to the cause to go after an innocent person is like their own blood sacrifice.
If they can protect this evil ideology, if they can protect the harming of these children, then they are demonstrated to be loyal subservience. But then I thought, it's like people are waking up to it. People are seeing the justice system for what it is. This is a corrupt investigation. This whole thing is corrupt, and I'm going to be destroyed or worse.
Especially when you think about what's happened to other whistleblowers. Right? Like in Boeing's case, where. Yeah, right. No kidding.
If you're a problem. So I thought the only way to survive this, you know, both theoretically and possibly physically, is to tell this story, because it's gonna happen either way. Yeah. Right. Yeah.
Jordan B. Peterson
Okay, so let me ask you again here. So you mentioned earlier who was leading the charge in the legal battle against you. So let's return to that for a minute, because insofar as it's possible and correct, I would like the people who are doing this not to be hidden. Now, you mentioned assistant attorney general in the south of Texas. Is that the person who's pursuing this case?
Eitan Haim
Yep. Yep. And people. Who is that? Yeah, who is that?
People can find it. You know, if they're interested, they can find out who that person is. Okay, okay, fine, fine. So we'll leave it at that. All right.
Jordan B. Peterson
And so. And so why are you loath to make the name public now? Just out of. I'm not going to pressure you. I'm just curious.
Eitan Haim
Just out of caution. Yeah. And also just for that reason. Okay. Yeah.
Jordan B. Peterson
Okay, that's fine. That's fine. All right, so. Oh, and you mentioned PaC. I believe it was Paxton's, or maybe the senate's, proclamation that the practices that the children's hospital were engaging in were.
Could be construed as criminal. You know, I'm curious at a international crimes level, because I think there's every reason to assume that the sterilization and mutilation of children is actually a crime against humanity. It's not a mere form of criminal activity, merely. And I do believe. I mean, I'm not a lawyer, and that's a problem, but I read the relevant description of what constitutes a crime against humanity.
And if this doesn't qualify, then, well, either my comprehension is addled or the legislation is written badly. Those are the options, as far as I can tell. And, you know, just to take a little detour for a second, I would actually challenge that. Right. Like Doctor Pearson, would you?
Eitan Haim
I would say that this is already a crime. Right? It's always been a crime if a patient comes into my clinic, right, I was. I was doing surgery earlier today, I was in clinic tomorrow, someone comes into my clinic and they say, doctor Haim, right? I'm so overweight, right?
I'm so overweight. I need a gastric sleeve. And they say it's my body image. I need this surgery. I need it because you need to affirm who I am.
But they're skinny and their BMI is like 15. If I were to operate on that person and do a gastric sleeve because they told me that, I lose my license, I go to prison. What's happening here is no different. But it's worse. Yeah.
Our Overton window. Our Overton window has shifted for this one single issue everywhere else, it's correct. But because this was infused from. With politics from the beginning, our Overton window has shifted. All we have to do is shift.
Jordan B. Peterson
Well, and you already, well, all you already showed too, though, in your earlier description is the Overton window for what constituted acceptable medical evidence shifted terribly during the pandemic. And that set the stage for this next sequence of lies. The fact that we've accepted the shift of that Overton window with regard to medical practice in this one domain means for sure it's going to shift in other ways. Right. You can see this happening already.
There are already papers being published in psychological journals disputing the validity of the diagnosis of borderline personality disorder, for example. And now it's not surprising that the borderline personality disordered people are pushing that agenda because that's exactly what you'd expect from people with borderline personality disorder. But it's definitely an indication of the increasing politicization of the diagnostic and counseling clinical medical enterprise. Right. And so once you get some of that poison in the system, it's not going to just sit there.
It's going to disseminate through the whole system. Okay, so now how, by this point, now you're in January, you've sent this letter to Jim Jordan. Walk us through the letter and then what his response was, if you would. Yeah. So letter say who Jim Jordan is too, for people?
Because not everyone will know. Yeah. So Jim Jordan is a congressman who is the chairman of the House subcommittee on the weaponization of the Department of Justice. He's a patriot. He's a great guy.
Eitan Haim
We had released this letter. The letter had outlined this profound misconduct that. The letter says that the prosecutor didn't even know the details of the case before sending agents to my home. Despite the fact that she didn't know the details of the case. She did enough research to find out my wife was undergoing a background check and use that as a threat.
The letter says that I had no right to blow the whistle. I had no right to try to protect these kids who were being harmed. The letter says that they were going to take me to a jury trial, even if they were going to lose, even if it's on a technicality, indicating that the law doesn't matter to them, that they're going to do whatever they want, whenever they want to whoever they want. And it was at that point that I knew for sure as an absolute fact that I had to do something. So we sent that letter.
That was after I took my story public. And the reason I took it public, public, as I said before, was because once you tell this story publicly, the corruption becomes self evident. Because it's like what? In what you said earlier, it's like when people hear it, they naturally think, man, this guy's probably Kremlin. He's probably a scumbag.
But I wouldn't let them define the story. If I'm going to go through this, it's going to be on my terms. I'm not going to let them. That's a better strategy. That's a better strategy.
Jordan B. Peterson
Definitely. I'm not gonna let them lie, just like they have everything else to manipulate, to cheat, to coerce. In this case, I have control, even though everyone would think I'm, like, the one who's least in control. When you're the focus of an investigation by a corrupt department of justice, you think you're not in control, but you have all the control because the only way for them to maintain their legitimacy is through your compliance. Right.
Eitan Haim
But it's only through your compliance that you get destroyed. So I took the story public, and the reason was just to protect myself, but also because the story's meaningless unless there's offense. Right? And most of our politicians aren't doing it. Right.
Most of the people who we elect to represent us aren't doing it. There's some good ones, but now it's our responsibility. During those six months where I was anonymous, we had spent over $250,000. All of our savings, our investments, everything were broke. We're going to be broke for a long time.
That's okay. But we had gone on the offense, too, to try to defend these bills, to try to develop cases, not only to protect whistleblowers, but also to make sure this doesn't happen in the future.
So I come out in January of 2024 with my story publicly over the next few months, until June, a week and a half ago, I'm just public, right. I, you know, I was working as a surgeon at the time. So walk us through that. Walk us through that. You brought it out publicly with Chris Ruffo again.
Jordan B. Peterson
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Our five beyond shop. Yep, you could say were kind of a big deal here. Shop over 1600 stores nationwide and fivebelow.com dot three. Yeah, well, it kind of blew up, you know, it was like my whole world kind of turned inside out in some ways. But then in many ways it was just completely normal because I go to work, I see my patients, I operate, and I just do that and I'm very busy.
Eitan Haim
But then there's this other world where it's like this thing is hanging over my head where we still have no idea what's going to happen, right. But we wanted to be able to tell the story, right, to make sure that people knew the truth. So I did interviews with Tucker CArlsOn. And who have you talked? Who have you?
Jordan B. Peterson
Yeah, yeah. CARLSON who else? Tucker Carlson Doctor Phil, John Popolo, dad saves America, Laura INGrahAm I mean, so many people. So many. Stella O'Malley and I know I'm probably missing a lot.
Eitan Haim
Kyle Seraphin, the FBI whistleblower really, really good people gaze against groomer as I talked to them, really good people. And I actually got the WPath files before it came out from Schellenberger's team because it was a few months after. Now, I read, I believe that there are four charges, specific charges pending against you. Now, is that the case, that they have something to do with illegal access of medical records? Can you do us a favor and like steel man the charges against you so that we understand what case they're trying to build?
Jordan B. Peterson
What are they claiming that you did? Now, you said it was very amorphous to begin with and that the prosecutor hadn't even really reviewed the case before she sent the agents to your house. I presume that theyve sharpened the case. Now theyve sharpened the dagger. And so ive heard that youre facing a very high fine and actually a fairly extensive potential prison sentence, something in the neighborhood of ten years.
So walk us through that, if you would. Yeah. So over these six months, I have no idea whats going on. But June 4, so not too long ago, three federal us marshals, heavily armed, show up to my door at 07:00 a.m. right?
Eitan Haim
Another show of force and hand. Yeah, yeah. Oh, yeah. For sure, for sure. Yeah.
Bulletproof vests, guns, everything. So they hand me indictment saying that I am being charged with four felonies this past Monday, two days or. Yeah, a few days ago, the indictment was unsealed. Because I'm facing this trial, I can't talk about the indictment in any detail. You know, just, just out of caution, out of prudence.
You know, there's people, people can read it themselves. But the one thing I will say. Where would they find it? And then walk us through it? Yep.
So yeah, unfortunately, I can't go through the indictment. But it's related to. Yeah, it's related to HIPAA, but the one thing I will say is that people can find it at the USDOJ website. There's a press release about it, and there's stories written in different media journals. I can't think of anyone off the top of my head, but the one thing I will say about it is my reaction to it on Monday when the indictment was unsealed.
When I read it for the first time, I had two emotions. And the first one sounds odd, but it was vindication, almost a degree of relief where I thought my heart was going to sink. But then I read it and I was like, oh, my God, these charges are as divorced from reality as the interventions they're trying to cover up. So it's, you know, I had that same experience, you know, last Christmas. I have 13 charges against me.
Jordan B. Peterson
Now, they're not criminal charges, but they're charges that would culminate in me either being reeducated, which is what I'm hypothetically sentenced to now, or losing my license. Right? So now I had to review all 13 charges last Christmas, and that was quite an onerous task, as you can imagine. There's like 30 pages of documentation per charge, so that's like 400 pages of charges. And, you know, I have a bit of a guilty conscience as a temperamental feature.
And so I suppose I regarded myself the same way. I might regard another troublemaker and think, well, you know, maybe I did something wrong that I haven't paid attention to. And so I was leery about going through these charges. But what happened took me three days. What happened at the end was two things.
I was relieved and I was. My jaw was dropped further open at the sheer magnitude of the incompetence and stupidity of my opponents. The things they charged me of were with. Were I, first of all, virtues. I came away from that thinking, oh, well, you know, if these are the people I'm up against, fundamentally, there's no real problem.
So I can understand your paradoxical emotion as a consequence of reviewing the charges, even though it's a pain in the neck and it's hyper expensive, as you've already discovered. And, you know, they can do me reputational damage as they can do you. You know, it's funny you say relief because that's what it is, but because you look at it, you're like, this can't be real. But I don't think it's incompetence. It's not incompetence.
Eitan Haim
Right? Because there's no way the most powerful federal investigative agency on this planet can be so incompetent. This is intentional, just like in your case. Right? And I knew so at first, right?
It's like I feel a degree of relief, vindication. This is a political prosecution. Like I said, I knew it was the right thing to take this story public, to tell it so that people knew the truth. But then the second thing was just this visceral fear. This visceral, visceral fear.
Because I know that I face ten years in prison. I might miss the birth of my first daughter. She's due in October. I can lose everything I've ever worked for, right? I could lose everything.
We've already lost everything we've ever saved up. All of our investments, our retirement, everything. But the thought on Monday of standing in front of that judge where you have these other people who are in there, and then these cocaine traffickers and some people who are pedophiles, then I'm there, too.
There's fear. There's a visceral. Visceral fear, but then there's that. But there's also one thing more, right? It's like this fear of what happens if I don't fight back, if we don't push forward.
The fear of kneeling to this ideology, of submitting to these corrupt, vicious people who want to take away all the virtues that makes this country great. Because it's like these are things in the physical world that they can do to us. But there's something, I believe that's beyond that. That's something that transcends what happens in our lives. And if I submit to this, I fear what happens then.
So even though I'm scared of what I face moving forward, what kind of world is my daughter gonna have if I don't do something about it? We have to do something now. So it's since then there's fear, but there's resolve. We have to fight. We have to stand up.
We have to make this right. Because if we don't, then what kind of. We say we love our children, we're willing to sacrifice for them, but what does that mean? Are we really willing to sacrifice for our kids if we're not willing to do something like this? Do we really love our kids if we're not willing to stand up for them in this way, to sacrifice every part of ourselves?
No, you can't say I don't believe that. I believe that if you love your children, the only way to really love them is to sacrifice for them. And if that means sacrificing what's happening to me, then I'll take this fight. So let me ask you another question here, if that's okay. So this is just a practical question, and then I'll ask something that's more conceptual.
Jordan B. Peterson
How is it that you're still practicing?
Eitan Haim
I work with good people. The best people. And I'm a good doctor. I'm a good surgeon. Right.
Before I did this interview, you know, it sounds. It might be hard to believe, but, I mean, I. A very, very complicated surgery. Yeah. But I'm amazed they haven't suspended.
Jordan B. Peterson
Hasn't suspended you or done something to trump up a situation that makes it impossible for you to continue. I'll tell you what. There's one thing I realized right once I took my story public. You. You think you're cross.
Eitan Haim
You think you're going into this world that is darkness, right? That you're going to be destroyed, that everyone's going to come after you and you think you're going to lose everything. But then what? I realized that it's the exact opposite, right?
Where you gain everything. Where you meet the best people in the world, where people from all over the world will support you, where you can live for the first time with dignity. You can look at yourself in the mirror and you could say, I'm not lying to myself. I can call myself a doctor. But this is true.
This is not something that is not real.
People understand that. People can see that. He told this story. He took a risk with telling the story, and he bite whatever he faces, but he told the story. And you know what?
People have been willing to stand behind me, and that includes my patients, the people I work with. And it's the most amazing thing, because the day the federal agents came, of course it was crazy. I had to take an hour or two to recollect myself. But I went to work. I rounded on 20 patients, sick patients.
I operated because that's my job. I have to take care of these people no matter what. And it doesn't mean anything if I don't do that, because I believe I was put on this earth to take care of sick people. So no matter what happens, I have to do that. So I'm still working because I think that people understand that people understand more what's happening to this country.
They understand what this is, and they understand my story because it's happening to other people, it's happening to me. They know it's gonna happen to them. Next. Next question. What were your political beliefs and your degree of political involvement before you started to see the ideological corruption and cowardice emerge in the medical profession?
Jordan B. Peterson
Were you a political person? And if so, where would have you placed yourself on the political spectrum? You know, I think, like so many kind of prominent or like a lot of people, and I think yourself included, I was a big time lefty for a long time, up until about college. You know, I kind of just. You become part of this milieu, right, this social, cultural, educational milieu, where your natural state is just to be on the left.
Eitan Haim
So that's where I was. But it was in my twenties that I kind of started to wake up to what was happening in the world. And a lot of it was because of Israel. Like, my family is from Israel, my dad's from Iraq. They're iraqi Jews, and they moved to Israel in the beginning.
My mom is german, she's christian, but she converted. That's where she met my dad. She moved to Israel and they met. But it kind of started this kind of, my eyes started to open over the next decade, between 21, 22 and now. And it was also during that time I just started reading hundreds and hundreds of books about history and fiction and everything, politics, economics, because I always thought I would read these books.
And I thought, like, our lives are so tame, right? We live in such a privileged time that nothing like this is ever going to happen. Reading stories about World War two and before and what my family had to go through in Israel or in Germany, and I thought that it would never happen, right? But then over the next couple, really, since 2020, I thought everything's changed. Right now, people like us are in the center of those stories.
And what I thought would never happen in my lifetime is now happening. But one thing I always remember from those stories is that the people, that there's no lying to yourself, there's no giving in and getting away with it, because the truth will always prevail. It might take, you might have to sacrifice your life, you might have to sacrifice a lot, but in those cases, the truth always prevails. And people always remember the people who did the right thing when it was the most difficult thing to do. So I kind of made that transformation towards becoming more conservative.
But yeah, for a long time, I was a big old lefty. So I'm curious, doctor. I've spent an ungodly amount of money fighting off the bureaucrats from the Ontario College of Psychologists. It's ridiculous. And so, luckily, I suppose I have the money, although that's not just luck.
Jordan B. Peterson
I might point out, but I don't understand how you're managing this. You said you already spent all your savings and all your money at hand, something approximating $250,000. How in the world are you funding it? And is there anything people can do to help? Yeah.
Eitan Haim
So ever since the agents came to my home, June 23, 2023, we knew we had to take this case forward. So we were funding it completely by ourselves. So we spent, at this point, probably almost $300,000. At this point, everything we've ever invested, all of our savings, all of our retirement, every paycheck we get goes to it. And I don't say that as, like, a victim, because to be able to fight this, it's a privilege to be able to fight for a future for our children.
But if people do want to help the fund, we need it. We absolutely need it to fight this case. In federal trial, it's going to be upwards of a million dollars. And if they do want to donate, they can go to conservatively givesengo.com Texas whistleblower. And it's the most amazing thing to see how many people have come out in support.
Every single message, every single donation. My wife and I, we read it every single night. Every single message. We read it multiple times. Because it's like I said before, where it's this world that you think you're going into, you think it's darkness, and you think you're going to be destroyed, but there's actually this entire world where there's people who are willing to support you, but.
But we need to fight. Uh, and that's what we're going to do. And there's no way that I'm. I'm going to dishonor the sacrifices of everyone who've donated to five below means. Hot stuff, cool prices, and the best kind of fun anywhere.
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Jordan B. Peterson
Okay, so let's close with this. When we go over to the daily wire side, everybody watching and listening I'm going to spend another half an hour with doctor haim on the daily wire side. I think what we're going to talk about there, rather than the autobiographical tack that I often take, I think what we'll talk about is why he thinks specifically the transgender madness has taken over the clinical and medical world. Because there's other ways the lie could have gone. So we're going to delve into that a bit more.
What I would like to close this part with, unless there's something else specifically that you'd like to bring up that we haven't covered, is what the hell's going to happen next to you? What do you think is going to happen, and what do you want to have happen? What's your plan? So what happens from here is we fight, we go to trial, we have to win. Because if we don't, the ability for people in american healthcare to blow the whistle, that door will be closed forever.
Eitan Haim
I have to do it for my profession. I have to do it for my children. But right now, there are children who are being harmed by this practice. We have to do it for them, because they're the ones who are in most imminent risk of their lives being unalterably changed and how much I look forward to seeing my daughter and having children. This is being taken away from them at the time when they at least understand the ability, the implications of their actions, when they at least understand the consequences.
Jordan B. Peterson
Okay, so you alluded earlier to something I just want to get straight. I saw, I think his name is Cenk Ugiere. He's one of the young Turks particularly. Well, we won't get into that. He claimed the other day on Piers Morgan that it's a very, very small number of children, if any, that this is happening to.
But you made the case earlier in the podcast that at the Texas Children's Hospital alone, it was something in the run of hundreds that are at least being put on puberty blockers. And that's no trivial thing. That hormonal intermediation, the idea that that's fully reversible is absolute bloody nonsense. But do you have a sense of just what magnitude this problem is and then of what the magnitude is in terms of the full movement towards surgical intervention among, specifically among minors? Let's say, I know that the diagnosis rate has gone way up.
It's now, at minimum, thousands and thousands of children who are diagnosed with gender dysphoria. But this is more specific on the medical side, being administered hormonal interventions. And then I know once that happens, the probability of progressing to sort surgery is quite high. So what kind of numbers do you think we're looking at here? So, I want to answer your question in two ways.
Eitan Haim
Specifically the numbers. I would say hundreds of thousands. And it's important for people to understand that once these children are being put in this position, they become a chronic medical patient for life. Because puberty blockers are not reversible, especially because by their own protocols, they shut off any exit ramp. They shut off any alternative because any alternative is prevented by the threat of their own suicide.
They're blackmailed into one pathway forward. So they're not meant to be on puberty blockers for a short period of time. Like, I would implant puberty blockers in kids who actually had precocious puberty. This early onset, when they're, like, six years old, they start, you know, having signs, but you take them out. Right, when they become, you know, 11, 12, 13 years old.
But in this case, they're meant to block the entirety of puberty, then hormones, then surgery. But I. The reason we can't give you an exact number is because there's illicit uses of drugs over the Internet, right? Right. For everyone.
Jordan B. Peterson
Right? Yes. But then I want to answer your question a second way, because those are numbers. Those are just statistics. After I took my story public, I got in touch with, like, this underground network of mothers and fathers in Dallas.
Eitan Haim
These people reached out to me because they want to involve me in what they were doing. These are mothers and fathers who've had a child affected by this. People like me and you. Many of them are classical liberals, conservatives, but their kids have been taken in by this transgender ideology, and there was no network for them. So this underground network of parents had formed in the shadows.
They all used signal. They were very shadowy, but they have a huge amount of impact behind the scenes. Like, they work on legislation, they work on bills. It's amazing. But I recently went to a meeting at one of their homes.
I'm very close with one of them. I can't even say her name because none of them want to be public, but these people are. I've never heard stories like this. I mean, it's, you know, but they would tell me stories about their kids and whether they're in high school or middle school or if they're older and how they got groomed by a counselor, a friend, someone online, and they come to them one day and say, I'm transgender. I need these drugs.
And then a lot of them, they don't know what to do, and they lose their children. So they tell these stories about how these children are gone. They haven't talked to him in years. Some of them are being trafficked. Some of them have lost their jobs.
They're addicted to drugs. But you see the pain in their eyes, right? That the person they love the most is gone forever. That the things they wanted for their children is gone forever. So when Cenk Uygur says that this is only a few kids, first of all, that's not true.
But these statistics, they have faces, right? This is a person. This is a mother and a father. This is a brother and a sister. These are people who've lost the person they love the most.
And it's. Yeah. Or this is a young woman, like. Like Chloe Cole, who no longer has breasts and will never recover from her surgery. Yeah.
Jordan B. Peterson
Right. And it's not obvious to me how many children you need like that before. Actually, you should pay a little bit of attention. And the answer to that might be one. Only a few is not much of a bloody defense as far as I'm concerned, because none is the right amount.
Like, seriously. And when you see every surgery, it's not just a surgery. Surgery is horrific enough, especially for healthy breasts. Like, I do these surgeries, and we do it for cancer, right? We do it for a reason.
Eitan Haim
And to think that I would take a patient to an operating room with healthy breasts and just take them off is horrific. But it's. It's the surgery itself. But it's everything that comes after that. And that's why I learned from these parents, because it's the day to day of anguish, of depression, of this existential crisis of never knowing who you are.
And your family goes through that suffering, too. And they're put on this road from the very beginning, from their 1112 years old. And it's like one day they wake up, they look in the mirror, and they think, what's happened to me? And the people who were supposed to love me were the ones who were supposed to protect me, but these were the people, the ones who were. But there's that on that, too.
Jordan B. Peterson
See, one of the things I found most reprehensible about all of this, the biggest lie in all of this was, well, would you rather have a live trans child or a dead child? Right? This insistence that to parents that if they dared voice opposition to this absolutely barbaric and unconscionable medical process, that they were basically dooming their children to death. I've studied atrocity for a very long time, and I've listened to and read things that were so terrible that it took me a long time to recover. I swear, I don't know if I've ever come across anything worse than the lie that if you don't facilitate your child's sterilization and mutilation, you're responsible for the death that is.
That's like Auschwitz level brutality and worse. There's no excuse for it. It's prison for those people. It's the most evil lie told in the history of medicine. Because when you think about.
Eitan Haim
I think that's right. In the past, when people were harmed by doctors, they would never have had the audacity to make it so that the people they were harming would appear that it was the doctors who were harming them were their salvation. That's never been done in the history of medicine. That's right. Even the Nazis.
Jordan B. Peterson
Even the Nazis hid their crimes. That's right. That's right. Even the people who were being harmed in those camps knew that these doctors were not helping them. But in this case, what they're saying is that we are your salvation.
Eitan Haim
But what they're doing is they're actually. They're existential destruction, because these children are born perfect and they're perfect people. Right. And they're going to grow up. It's hard, but it's those challenges that you go through during that time that make you who you are.
And they're taking that away from them. Yeah. They didn't. They didn't even tell. They didn't even tell Chloe Cole that body dysmorphia is a standard symptom of juvenile.
Jordan B. Peterson
Of mild juvenile depression. The most obvious psychological fact. Right. The sort of thing that any counselor who was trained at all or who wasn't outright lying would have said to her first was never told to her at all. And that's the depth of lies that the therapeutic community.
Therapeutic community is engaged in when they're allies to the trans butchers. So should we be parsing between the differences of this study versus that study when this is accessible to basic, universal human logic, which is really the foundation of medicine? If someone's bleeding, you stop the bleed. If you have a confused young child, you do not give them cancer drugs, hormones, and you don't operate on them. You tell them to love who they are, and it's an unimaginable thing, and we just have to see it for what it is.
Eitan Haim
This is not medicine. It's not oriented towards what medicine is. It's not a few degrees off. This is anti medicine. This is oriented towards not the healing of a patient, but the destruction of.
Jordan B. Peterson
A patient, but their destruction. Absolutely. All right, sir. Well, that's a good and terrible place to end. And so, as I mentioned earlier, we're going to continue this discussion on the daily wiresite, and we're going to delve more into the anti human and anti medicine origins of the trans insanity that the medical and psychological communities have allowed to possess their entire endeavor.
And so, for all of you watching and listening, you can join us on the daily wire plus side for that discussion. Thank you very much, sir. Thank you. Five below means hot stuff, cool prices, and the best kind of fun anywhere. The trends you see all over your feed can be yours for way less than the rest.
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