Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:03):
This is Red Pilled America. This Labor Day holiday, we're
giving you fifty percent off of our annual redpilled America
dot com entry level membership. If you've been hesitating becoming
a backstage subscriber, now's the time to join. Just go
to Redpilled America dot com and click the Labor Day
offer near the top of the page. Then enter discount
(00:23):
code Labor Day fifty for fifty percent off an annual
entry level subscription. You'll get add free access to our
entire catalog of episodes. Join the fanbam and support storytelling
that aligns with your values this Labor Day. Help us
save America one story at a time.
Speaker 2 (00:39):
Now onto the show.
Speaker 1 (00:41):
This episode was originally broadcast on March twenty eighth, twenty
twenty four. For decades, Hollywood and the legacy media have
tried to normalize transgenderism. The campaign is reached into every
facet of American culture.
Speaker 3 (00:58):
Celebrity offspring of the legendary Sunny and Share Chastity Bono.
Speaker 4 (01:01):
She is now in the process of switching genders.
Speaker 5 (01:04):
Are you a woman?
Speaker 6 (01:05):
Yes?
Speaker 7 (01:06):
For all intentsive purposes, I am a woman.
Speaker 8 (01:08):
Leah Thomas has become the first openly transgender athlete to
win a Division one NCAA championship.
Speaker 9 (01:14):
Doctor Rachel Levine is now the first openly transgender official
to be confirmed by the United States Senate.
Speaker 10 (01:20):
Not all boys have a penis and not all girls
have a vagina.
Speaker 1 (01:24):
Now that we're decades into this social experiment, it's time
to ask a simple question, what should parents do about transgenderism?
I'm Patrick Carelci.
Speaker 2 (01:36):
And I'm Adriana Cortes.
Speaker 1 (01:38):
And this is Red Pilled America, a storytelling show.
Speaker 2 (01:42):
This is not another talk show covering the day's news.
We're all about telling stories.
Speaker 1 (01:47):
Stories. Hollywood doesn't want you to hear stories.
Speaker 2 (01:50):
The media mocks stories about everyday Americans at the globalist ignore.
Speaker 1 (01:56):
You can think of Red Pilled America as audio documentaries,
and we promise only one thing, the truth. Welcome to
Red Pilled America. What should parents do about transgenderism? To
(02:19):
find the answer, we tell the story of how the
transgender mob pressured a family into changing their daughter's gender
and in the process revealed what parents must do to
protect their children.
Speaker 2 (02:35):
It was mid February twenty twenty four when transgender activists
exploded with outrage.
Speaker 11 (02:40):
I bet y'all haven't heard about the brutal beating of
Next Benedict, a non binary high school student.
Speaker 2 (02:46):
The student they were all talking about was Next Benedict,
a sophomore from Owasso, Oklahoma.
Speaker 9 (02:52):
Next Benedict was sixteen years old, non binary, living in
the Republican hill skate that is Oklahoma.
Speaker 12 (02:57):
This sixteen year old sophomore, non binary youth at a
high school just outside of Tulsa, Oklahoma, was beaten to
death by classmates.
Speaker 13 (03:06):
An altercation occurred wherein three older girls beat up Next
in the girl's bathroom.
Speaker 9 (03:11):
A bathroom that Nicks was forced to use because of
laws regarding their gender identity.
Speaker 13 (03:17):
Next Benedict was sitting in class terrified.
Speaker 14 (03:19):
Oklahoma just banned trans kids from going to the bathroom,
so they had a decision to make do they.
Speaker 13 (03:23):
Break the law or not? Next, a straight a student,
followed the law and went into the girls room.
Speaker 14 (03:28):
They didn't know that three older girls followed them inside.
Speaker 13 (03:31):
It has been reported that at least one of the
girls was repeatedly beating Nexu's head on the bathroom floor, but.
Speaker 12 (03:36):
The classmates slammed this child's head into the floor repeatedly.
Speaker 13 (03:40):
It was at that time a teacher walked in and
broke up the fight.
Speaker 2 (03:43):
The story these activists told was remarkably consistent.
Speaker 9 (03:47):
The child could not walk, Nix was unable to walk.
Speaker 13 (03:50):
Next could not walk to the nurses station without assistance.
Nobody at the school called the police or an ambulance,
or is reported to have taken any action of any kind.
Speaker 12 (03:59):
Did the school call an ambulance.
Speaker 15 (04:00):
No.
Speaker 13 (04:01):
Some reports have even said that the school refused to
call an ambulance.
Speaker 9 (04:05):
No ambulance was called, no parent was called, no bully punished.
Speaker 11 (04:10):
Their grandmother brought them to the hospital after the fight.
Speaker 13 (04:13):
The child was released from the hospital that evening, but
was rushed back the following day, where they passed away.
Speaker 9 (04:18):
They died as a result of that physical assault.
Speaker 10 (04:21):
They couldn't have an open casket at the funeral because
of how bad it was.
Speaker 9 (04:28):
It was.
Speaker 3 (04:29):
These far right attacks, these elevations of anti trans folks,
have deadly consequences.
Speaker 2 (04:36):
It was a horrific story any parent's worst nightmare. An
innocent high school sophomore followed into a bathroom. The student
was forced to use, then murdered by hate filled older
girls simply for being trans. It had all the hallmarks
of a story that should have been national news. Yet,
ten days after the child's death, the activists were astonished
(04:58):
that the national media had yet to pick up the story.
Speaker 12 (05:00):
I honestly cannot understand why this is not getting more attention.
Speaker 2 (05:04):
The gruesome tale portrayed in America that few could recognize.
The only problem was the core of the narrative was
a complete fabrication. Next Benedict was not jumped by older girls.
The sophomore didn't need help walking out of the bathroom.
Next wasn't even being bullied. It was Next that was
the aggressor. And if that wasn't enough, non binary nexts
(05:26):
may not have been non binary or even named Nexts.
The story of Next Benedict is one that illustrates the
power of the transgender narrative machine and why it must
be dismantled to save the lives of children. News of
(05:47):
the tragic death of the Owasso sophomore first reached the
public on February eighth, twenty twenty four, when local station
KJRH first broke news of a student that died one
day after a fight.
Speaker 14 (05:59):
We also police are investigating a sixteen year old high
school student, UD's death.
Speaker 16 (06:03):
Tonight, detectives are still trying to piece together exactly what happened.
Speaker 14 (06:07):
It was yesterday afternoon, around three point thirty when police
were called to the Bailey Medical Center here in Owasso.
A parent had called them and said that their sixteen
year old daughter had gotten in a fight at school
and wanted to report that fight to police. Now, this
was the first time they had heard about this fight.
They filed a report, and then earlier this evening they
were told that that same student was rushed back to
the hospital and died this evening. They do not know
(06:29):
if the fight was related to the death. They said,
there was a medical incident that happened today and that's
why she was taken to the hospital. They're awaiting an
autopsy and a toxicology report to give a final result
on this case.
Speaker 2 (06:42):
Other local stations would pick up the story the following day.
All reporting labeled the deceased a girl.
Speaker 12 (06:48):
Police say the girl got into a fight at school
but then died a day.
Speaker 2 (06:51):
Later, but the name of the female had not yet
been announced. For the next week, the media was quite
on the story that by the time of her funeral.
Reporters from KJRH spoke with Sue Benedict, who confirmed her child,
Dagny Benedict, was the deceased. A reporter for KJRH was
at the.
Speaker 17 (07:10):
Funeral out of respect for the family. We didn't take
video inside, but I can tell you firsthand it was
a moving service.
Speaker 2 (07:17):
The reporter transcribed part of Sue Benedict's speech and the
mother was understandably distraught. She was tough, but a great kid,
said Dagny's mother. I loved Dagny so much. It was
clear per Dagne's mother and the obituary that the family
viewed Dagny as a girl.
Speaker 17 (07:35):
Dagny was an animal lover, according to her family, especially
when it came to the cat zeus.
Speaker 2 (07:42):
A friend even referred to Dagny with she her pronouns.
Speaker 17 (07:46):
I got in touch with Alexandria Davison at the local
candy store, she tells me. Dagne would often go by
the nickname Nez. She says, Dagny was fun to be
around and lovable to everybody.
Speaker 10 (07:57):
Someone I used to walk in the halls with, something
I could have been to class with, is no longer
part of our life, no longer part of the community,
a community that I love, and now she's gone.
Speaker 2 (08:10):
It was a tragic local story the untimely loss of
a young girl with her whole life ahead of her.
It's likely that in just a few days, the death
of Dagny Benedict would have quietly dissipated from local news reports.
But then a lesbian activist from Pittsburgh picked up the story.
She'd repackaged Dagny as Next Benedict. And when she did
(08:32):
the story of the dead sophomore? What nuclear.
Speaker 1 (08:37):
Licorice? Licorice? Where art thou licorice? If you listen to
Red Pilled America, you know that I love licorice. And
there is no licorice in America better than the delicious
gourmet licorice made by the Licorice Guy. The licorice Guy
is simply the best. What sets their licorice apart is
its flavor and freshness. They have a great selection of
(09:00):
flavors to choose from, like red, blue, raspberry, black, and
green apple, just to name a few. The freshness of
the Licorice Guy is unlike anything you've ever tasted in
licorice before. Seriously, if you haven't tried licorice from the
Liquorice Guy yet, then you ain't living life right. Trust me,
you will not regret it. It's time to dump that
store bought liquorice that's so hard it'll break your teeth
(09:21):
and get yourself the soft, fresh stuff from the Licorice Guy.
What I also love about the Liquorice Guy is that
it's an American family owned business. It's made right here
in the beautiful US of A. We are big proponents
of buying American and supporting American workers. Right now, Red
Pilled America listeners get fifteen percent off when they enter
(09:41):
RPA fifteen at checkout. Visit Licoriceguy dot com and enter
RPA fifteen at checkout. That's Licoriceguy dot com. They ship daily,
treat yourself and those you love, and taste the difference.
Welcome back to Red Pilled America. So the death of
Dagny Benedict was covered by local media, but the national
(10:05):
media largely ignored the tragedy. That is until a lesbian
activist picked up the story. On February sixteenth, twenty twenty four,
just a day after Dagne's funeral, a self branded Pittsburgh
lesbian published an article on her website. The explosive headline read,
Grieving Next Benedict. The brutal killing of sixteen year old
non binary student in an Oklahoma high school. The article
(10:31):
was filled with one shocking claim after another, that Dagny
was jumped by older girls in the girl's bathroom, that
one girl was repeatedly beating Dagney's head across the floor.
After the beating, Dagny couldn't walk to the nurses station
on her own, and even after the horrendous beating, the
school's staff refused to call an ambulance. What would have
(10:51):
caught any local Oasso reporter's eye was the name the
headline gave to the deceased. Throughout the article, a lesbian
activist referred to Dagne as necks and used they then
pronouns per day. Throughout Apparently the writer found information that
the dead sophomore was non binary. The post might have
gone unnoticed, but a Harvard transgender instructor of Lejandra Carbaiyo,
(11:15):
posted the article on x with the caption, a non
binary teenager was brutally beaten to death in an Oklahoma
high school by their classmates in the school bathroom. This
is the inevitable result of anti transmorl panic. Within a
matter of hours, the post went viral on x, receiving
almost nine million views, and it inspired social media users
(11:38):
to use storytelling to demand.
Speaker 12 (11:39):
Justice These attacks on transgender and gender nonconforming youth, in fact,
all LGBTQIA plus young people entirely are escalating to the
point that they are becoming deadly.
Speaker 11 (11:52):
This needs to be blown up. Somebody needs to be
held accountable immediately, and.
Speaker 1 (11:56):
Some LGBTQ activists found a way to add potency to
their narrative.
Speaker 13 (12:01):
Now next, Benedict is dead after a fight in the
same school that Chiarechek targeted, stoking the local community with
the fear that their children were being groomed by queer
ideology less than two years ago.
Speaker 1 (12:12):
Chia Rachik is the purveyor of libs of TikTok, an
x account that reposts TikTok and other videos of radical
gender activists. Now, these activists weren't just creating this story
out of thin air. Their source all appeared to be
from the Pittsburgh Lesbian Post, who in turn got her
details from an early report by local news station KJRH.
(12:34):
The day after Dagney's death, KJRH two News got a
call from someone who claimed to be the mother of
Dagney's best friend. She asked reporters to keep her name anonymous,
but she gave the station a sensational version of the
bathroom brawl.
Speaker 17 (12:48):
Two News got the tip about the fight from a
woman claiming to be the mother of the victim's best friend.
I spoke with her Friday.
Speaker 18 (12:55):
I think they complications from brain drama or head drama.
Speaker 17 (13:02):
The mother wouldn't tell me the victim's name, but says
she was a sophomore. She says three older girls were
beating on the victim and her daughter in the girl's bathroom.
Speaker 18 (13:12):
I know at one point one of the girls was
pretty much repeatedly beating her head against the floor.
Speaker 13 (13:18):
She says.
Speaker 17 (13:19):
A teacher walked in and broke it up.
Speaker 18 (13:21):
She couldn't walk to the nurse's station on her own,
and the staff proceeded not to call anavians.
Speaker 1 (13:26):
Just amazing if true. The anonymous tipster's version of the
story was interesting not only because of its sensational nature,
but also because the tipster constantly referred to Dagny by
she her pronouns, just as Dagne's mother had done earlier.
I mean, this was allegedly the mother of Dagney's best friend.
This same station actually spoke to Dagne's mother, Sue Benedict,
(13:48):
and another friend of the sophomore, and they all referred
to the deceased as Dagny with she her pronouns. Where
did this lesbian activist come up with the name and
pronoun change. An independent reporter named Jeremy lee Quinn asked
the Pittsburgh activist that broke the story to the LGBTQ
community if she'd ever confirmed Dagne's preferred pronouns. The blogger
(14:09):
reportedly responded saying she couldn't find anything on social media
that confirmed that aspect of the story. Jeremy lee Quinn
also claims to have texted with a friend of Dagny's.
Speaker 2 (14:19):
Who told him she went by both names.
Speaker 1 (14:22):
Meaning Next and Dagny. The message went on.
Speaker 2 (14:24):
For some reason, people are assuming that she only went
by Next, like she completely changed her name.
Speaker 1 (14:30):
Apparently she had not. Another liberal YouTuber claiming to be
a father of a daughter at Oasso High School said
his daughter only knew of Dagny as Dagny, not Next.
Dagne's obituary was published on February tenth, two days after
her death, and it clearly states her name was in
fact Dagny, and the text of the obituary used she
(14:50):
her pronouns throughout.
Speaker 2 (14:52):
Dagney Ellis Benedict was born on January eleventh, two thousand
and eight, in El Paso, Texas.
Speaker 1 (14:57):
Opens the obituary.
Speaker 2 (14:58):
She passed from this life on Thursday, February eighth, twenty
twenty four, in Tulsa, Oklahoma, at the age of sixteen years.
Speaker 1 (15:06):
A reporter for KJRH published parts of Dagnes's mother's speech
at the funeral.
Speaker 2 (15:11):
She was tough, but a great kid. I loved Dagny
so much.
Speaker 1 (15:15):
Dagne also had no social media footprint that could publicly
verify her use of the name next or her preference
for non binary pronouns. With Dagny's mother, the alleged mother
of Dagnes's best friend, the obituary, and multiple alleged friends
of Dagny referring to her with she her pronouns, It's
unclear where the Pittsburgh LGBTQ activist came up with the
(15:36):
name and pronoun change, but in the days that followed
her viral post, it would become clear why she heard
Dagney Benedict would be repackaged as they them Next Benedict.
Speaker 2 (15:48):
The day after Dagne's death, a woman named Cassandra Phelps
set up a go fund Me account with Dagny's mother,
Sue Benedict, as the beneficiary. Gofund Me is, of course,
a platform that many people used to raise donations for
any number of reasons, including funeral expenses. Dagne's GoFundMe page
opened to stating, quote, it is with great sadness and
(16:10):
a heavy heart that we have to share the unexpected
passing of Dagny Benedict on February eighth, twenty twenty four.
Dagny was a daughter, sister, cousin, and aunt. The page
started off with the modest goal of fifteen thousand dollars
to pay for quote funeral expenses. About two days before
the funeral, the page garnered roughly seventy five hundred dollars,
(16:33):
about half its goal. The day after the funeral, it
reached almost ten thousand dollars, roughly two third of its goal.
Typically that would be the end of the fundraiser, but
in this case, it was just getting started. Once Dagny
was repackaged as non binary next Benedict, LGBTQ plus activists
went on a war path demanding social media users, reporters,
(16:57):
and even the parents stopped using the name Dagny and
instead refer to the deceased as nexts.
Speaker 3 (17:03):
The absolute gall of you people to misgender and dead
name someone who was killed, literally killed for being in
the trans spectrum.
Speaker 2 (17:16):
They contacted local news demanding more coverage.
Speaker 5 (17:20):
Some people are asking questions about why we are not
doing more coverage on the death of a sixteen year
old a Wilso student. We want people to know we
did report on that student's death two weeks ago, and
we did report on that student's funeral.
Speaker 2 (17:36):
The transactivists used the rallying call say their name, with
the term there in the slogan, referring to non binary pronouns.
They then with the Alphabet Mafia community, branding Dagny as
non binary Next. The go fund me immediately quadrupled to
forty thousand dollars. It was around this time that Dagne's mother,
(17:57):
Sue Benedict, posted an update to the go fundme page,
stating quote, we at this time are thankful for the
ongoing support and did not expect the love from everyone.
We are sorry for not using their name correctly, and
as parents, we were still learning the correct forms. Please
do not judge us as Next was judged. Please do
not bully us for our ignorance on the subject. The
(18:19):
headstone will have correct name of their choice in Next
Benedict's name, God bless, And just like that, it became official.
She heard Dagny Benedict became they them Next Benedict. It
was clear Dagny's parents were getting pressured into changing their
daughter's name, and the financial windfall for the switch would
be remarkable.
Speaker 1 (18:41):
Local newsdesks scrambled to make the pronoun changes.
Speaker 19 (18:45):
So many of you reached out to us about Nex's
name and preferred pronouns.
Speaker 8 (18:49):
Initially, we held off on reporting that information because we
were still working to get the name and pronouns confirmed
through an official source.
Speaker 19 (18:57):
The student's family has now confirmed they went by the
name Next Benedict and used they then pronouns. Originally, the
student's obituary had she her pronouns. That's why we're pointing
this out.
Speaker 3 (19:08):
It has changed.
Speaker 1 (19:09):
In some cases. Local stations even went back to previously
published stories and changed their use. If she heard today them,
it was a remarkable turn of events. Media, even in
deep red Oklahoma, adopted the trans terminology the switch made
this story go nuclear.
Speaker 8 (19:27):
This story has now gone viral on social media, prompting
officers in the school district to release new statements.
Speaker 17 (19:33):
On February twentieth, the Wassall School say the quote altercation
that took place in the bathroom lasted less than two
minutes and was broken up by other students and a
staff member who were there. After, the students involved walked
on their own to get aid. School staff say they
determined an ambulance wasn't needed, but one student's parents was
(19:54):
recommended they bring their child to a hospital.
Speaker 13 (19:57):
Police are actively investigating the fight at school and are
waiting on the medical examiner's report for the cause.
Speaker 1 (20:02):
In mana of death, activists stormed a meeting which included
the school district's superintendent, Ryan Walters. Walters had been a
loud critic of the transgender movement. An activists blamed him
for the death, But just as community activists erupted, a
witness of the bathroom altercation came forward to dispel some
of the misinformation littering the reporting.
Speaker 8 (20:28):
Was actually one of the souls, a few of their
hair was messed up.
Speaker 1 (20:31):
That's Sheela Perez, an OsO High school student. That spoke
to a local ABC affiliate, But.
Speaker 10 (20:36):
For the most part, no one really had like concerning
like super.
Speaker 18 (20:41):
Concerning marks or anything.
Speaker 11 (20:43):
There was like a few bruises maybe including this died.
Speaker 17 (20:46):
Yes.
Speaker 1 (20:47):
The Oaso Police Department no doubt saw a national firestorm
was brewing, so they released even more information about Dagne's death.
Speaker 4 (20:55):
Oaso police tell us the initial medical examiners report shows
next Benedict did not die from trauma.
Speaker 1 (21:01):
Oaso law enforcement said the toxicology report would give the
definitive cause of death, but that could take a few
more weeks to be released. They hoped they'd quieted the storm,
but activists stepped up their attack on the community now.
Speaker 17 (21:15):
Wasso police say several threats have been called in and
emailed to Owaso Public School since yesterday morning.
Speaker 20 (21:21):
Awaso please say. One of the threatening messages they got
said I'm coming to the school and that's what made
law enforcement concern. Also, police plans to have extra officers
around schools for the near future.
Speaker 1 (21:34):
Perhaps in an attempt to posture for a future lawsuit.
The attorney for the Benedict family issued a statement.
Speaker 4 (21:40):
That says the Benedicts know all too well the devastating
effects of bullying and school violence, and pray for meaningful
change where bullying is taken seriously.
Speaker 15 (21:48):
The family says, we still haven't seen video that shows
Next or any of these people were able to leave
this girl's bathroom unassisted, so we don't know the extent
of the injuries coming out of this fight.
Speaker 1 (21:59):
As the Benedict family turned up the heat, the story
went nash.
Speaker 19 (22:03):
While an investigation is underway into the death of a
non binary high school student just one day after a
fight with other students on campus.
Speaker 21 (22:09):
Now their death is galvanizing the LGBTQ community amid concerns
they were bullied for their gender identity.
Speaker 1 (22:15):
The story got so hot that the Biden White House responded.
Speaker 21 (22:18):
Okay, so I want to address some devastating news out
of Oklahoma. As a parent, I was absolutely heartbroken to
learn about Next Benedict's and death. Every young person deserves
to feel safe and support it at school. Our hearts
are with Next Benedict's family, friends, entire school community. In
(22:41):
the wake of this horrific and gut wrenching tragedy, I
know that for many LGBTQ plus students across the country,
this may feel personal and deeply, deeply painful. There's always
someone you can talk to.
Speaker 1 (22:57):
But what the world would soon learn was that the
police Department was holding back some information. With the White
House now getting involved, they weren't going to hold back
any longer. By the time the OASOPD were done, the
entire narrative peddled by the LGBTQ activists would crumble. This
Labor Day holiday, we're giving you fifty percent off of
(23:18):
our annual redpilled America dot com entry level membership. If
you've been hesitating becoming a backstage subscriber, now's the time
to join. Just go to Redpilled America dot com and
click the Labor Day offer near the top of the page.
Then enter discount code Labor Day fifty for fifty percent
off an annual entry level subscription. You'll get add free
(23:38):
access to our entire catalog of episodes. Join the fanbam
and support storytelling that aligns with your values. This Labor Day,
help us save America, one story at a time.
Speaker 2 (23:49):
Welcome back to Red Pilled America. With the White House
responding to the tragic death of Dagni Benedict, all eyes
were on the Owasso police force. It had been roughly
two weeks since the death of the sophomore investigators no
doubt we're holding back information, but with the building national pressure,
they decided it was time to release the Kraken activists
(24:12):
claimed after the beating that Next Benedict couldn't even walk
to the nurse's office without assistance. Her family were raising
questions about the same issue.
Speaker 15 (24:21):
The family says, we still haven't seen video that shows
Next or any of these people were able to leave
this girl's bathroom unassisted, so we don't know the extent
of the injuries coming out of this fight.
Speaker 2 (24:31):
So the Owasu Police Department released surveillance video that completely
destroyed that narrative. The video showed that it wasn't the
girls that followed Dagne into the bathroom, it was the
other way around, Dagny followed them. The videos also showed
Dagne walking under her own accord to the nurse's office
after the fight. School surveillance video also showed Dagne walking
(24:53):
with her own mother unassisted, out to an awaiting car.
This new piece of information began to raise questions about
Sue Benedict's credibility. Why would family lawyer raised this issue
when Dagny's own mother saw that her daughter needed no
assistance in walking. But perhaps most damning, the Owasso Police
Department also released the body cam of an officer that
(25:16):
visited Dagny and her mother at the hospital. Yes, in
response to Super Benedict's request to file a police report.
An officer arrived at Dagne's hospital room.
Speaker 22 (25:31):
What happened today, tell me about it?
Speaker 6 (25:34):
What happened?
Speaker 2 (25:35):
It was clear that the officer was familiar with Dagny,
and that's because she had recently been in trouble. As
the conversation progressed, the officer learned that the altercation occurred
while Dagney was serving an at school suspension. Apparently Dagne
and a few of her friends had been caught vaping,
I mean.
Speaker 22 (25:55):
From the other day of the vaping situations.
Speaker 11 (25:57):
Okay, okay, okay, Yeah, it.
Speaker 2 (26:03):
Was easy to see if that Dagni was not brutally beaten.
In fact, there was not even a single visible bruise.
This was not at all what the media narrative had
been portraying. Dagne went on to explain the altercation, so they.
Speaker 22 (26:16):
Just up and decided to start messing with you there.
Speaker 11 (26:20):
Yeah, because of the.
Speaker 8 (26:20):
Way that we dressed.
Speaker 2 (26:21):
From the videos, you could see that Dagny wasn't dressed
noticeably different than other girls. The fight didn't start because
Dagne was transgender. These kids were having the same conflict
that plays out thousands of times a day throughout American
high school.
Speaker 23 (26:35):
We were going to sex chairs, and we after re
sex chairs, we went to.
Speaker 8 (26:39):
The bathroom and I was talking with my friends.
Speaker 11 (26:42):
They were talking with their friends.
Speaker 23 (26:44):
And we were laughing, and they had said something like,
why do they laugh.
Speaker 11 (26:48):
Like that in front of us?
Speaker 16 (26:50):
And so I went up there and I poured water
on them, and then all three of them came at me.
Speaker 2 (26:56):
It was Dagne that started the altercation by pouring water
on the girls for weeks. Dagne's mother suggested that the
(27:16):
altercation was tied to her daughter being bullied over a
long period of time, but Dagny had never met any
of them until participating in ISP or in school suspension.
As Dagne would explain herself, obviously you know each.
Speaker 22 (27:30):
Other, Obviously you both don't well you love each other
with the vague situations and all that.
Speaker 16 (27:35):
Or no before this IP thing, uh huh, we never
saw each other that freshmen were sophomore okay.
Speaker 2 (27:42):
Contrary to what the woke mob was screaming, the girls
weren't older than Dagny. They were freshmen. Dagny was a
sophomore who.
Speaker 11 (27:49):
Never saw each other. That freshmen were sophomore okay.
Speaker 2 (27:52):
Dagne wasn't being bullied by older girls. She was the aggressor.
But perhaps the biggest narrative buster was it. Throughout the conversation,
Dagne's mother was referring to her her daughter, not as
they them next, but is she her, Dagny.
Speaker 24 (28:06):
She's been an ice bak And she told me, she said, Mom,
she said, I said, ignore it.
Speaker 11 (28:11):
Dagney.
Speaker 24 (28:12):
She didn't til she couldn't in the bathroom, just baiting
the crap out of her because she never touched them.
She never touched them, Now she did. She did throw
some water at them.
Speaker 2 (28:22):
The entire woke mob narrative was a fabrication based on
one biased, anonymous source that got much of the critical
information wrong. After hearing Dagney's side of the story, the
officer advised her mother that he could take a police report,
but it would put Dagne in legal jeopardy because it
was her that started the fight.
Speaker 22 (28:41):
So I will absolutely report it. That's what you want,
I can get, okay, but I'm just letting you know
the other party wants to do the same thing. She's
going to be the assault will be on her as well.
The moment she threw that water, You've now assaulted somebody.
You made the first jat based on her own admittance
on camera, as well as whatever.
Speaker 25 (28:59):
Else she essentially started it. She's letting the little bit
more of a situation because she's the one who started
by throwing an object or an item onto another individual,
starting the incident. She's the one who started the domino effect.
Speaker 2 (29:14):
In the end, Dagny's mother decided to not press charges.
With the release of the videos, the public was starting
to get a clearer picture of what actually happened, but
the Wasso police weren't done. They also released the emergency
nine to one one call Dagnes's mother placed the following.
Speaker 26 (29:31):
Day as the address of your emergency.
Speaker 2 (29:35):
And the call gave glaring hints as to the real
cause of death.
Speaker 6 (29:39):
And I need to get someone an ambulance there quick, please,
my daughter. I don't know what's going around and wrong.
She's posturing and her hands.
Speaker 2 (29:48):
She is sixteen, okay, Dagne's mom was fixated on the
fight the previous day.
Speaker 6 (29:55):
In her hands are posturing already, they're rolling in like like.
I don't know if it's from her head injury because
the girls that be up knocked her to the ground
and she and they were she hit her head on
the bathroom floor.
Speaker 26 (30:08):
This is information I don't need. I need to know
so that she's breathing, okay, and stuff like that about
you yesterday, it doesn't matter to me.
Speaker 2 (30:16):
The nine one one dispatcher asked if Dagny had been
taking any drugs.
Speaker 26 (30:20):
Does she take any medication?
Speaker 6 (30:22):
No, she does at night, yes, but she hasn't had
none today, okay.
Speaker 26 (30:27):
And does she take any illegal drugs? Not that I care, I.
Speaker 6 (30:30):
Just need no, Okay, she does not know.
Speaker 26 (30:32):
She doesn't smoke or vape or any of that stuff.
Speaker 6 (30:35):
She has like yes.
Speaker 2 (30:37):
Ultimately, Dagne's mom elaborated on her daughter's medication.
Speaker 26 (30:41):
What medication does she take at night?
Speaker 6 (30:43):
It's for anxiety and she can be mood swings.
Speaker 7 (30:48):
Uh.
Speaker 6 (30:49):
Fluoxatin and quincipine okay.
Speaker 2 (30:52):
Fluocatine is known by the brand named Prozac and is
taken for anxiety, obsessive compulsion, and major depression disorders. Quatiapine
is an antipsychotic medication taken for bipolar disorder, schizophrenia, and
other major depressive disorders.
Speaker 6 (31:07):
But she only takes that at night, about eight o'clock
at night before she goes to good and I keep
it put up.
Speaker 2 (31:12):
So and this is where we should pause for a moment.
For over two weeks, as the story went from a tragic,
small local story to a national event, it's hard to
get around the high probability that Dagne's mother was not
giving the entire story to the American public. She'd already
been informed that the altercation was not a result of bullying.
(31:33):
It was actually Dagny that started the fight. When she
picked up her daughter. She could also see that Dagne
didn't need any help getting to the car and was
not visibly injured. According to Dagne's mom, she was once
a nurse.
Speaker 26 (31:45):
Okay, but she's reading like, we don't need to start
a CPR. That's just my main concern right now.
Speaker 6 (31:50):
No, no, no, no, I would have done that already, honest. See,
I was a nurse. I went to nursing school.
Speaker 12 (31:55):
Okay, Okay.
Speaker 2 (31:56):
The medical examiner had already announced that Dagny hadn't died
from trauma. If she was a nurse, that was in
common antact with law enforcement since the death of her daughter,
and since she was the keeper of her medication, it's
not a huge leap to think that Dagne's mom was
at least aware that Dagny's death was possibly the result
of a self inflicted act. Nevertheless, for weeks that was
(32:18):
not the message she conveyed to the public. In fact,
quite the opposite. According to news reports, Dagne's mother suggested
that the truth of her daughter's death was being covered
up by the police. By the day of the police
Department's data dump, Dagney Benedict's go fund Me campaign swelled
to over one hundred and twenty thousand dollars. In the
(32:38):
coming days, the public would learn more about Dagney Benedict.
Vigils were held by transactivists in various pockets of the country,
including Texas, Boston, and elsewhere.
Speaker 27 (32:55):
This is a vigil for Next Benedict, who tragically died
after a bullying and fight situation in a nearby They
were a non binary to spirit Indigenous youth.
Speaker 2 (33:08):
But it was the community of Auaso that gave a
peek into what was to come, a vigil for Next
Benedict was organized in the town that she died in.
A large crowd was expected. The school has reported three
thousand students, so the organizers purchased six hundred candles, but
they wouldn't need that many. Only about one hundred people
(33:28):
showed up. Nevertheless, national media would cover the event.
Speaker 16 (33:32):
Memories of jokes and joy echoed through Oasso's Redbud Festival
Park Sunday whi also high school parent Anna Richardson didn't
know Next, but knew the community needed a safe place
to mourn them and organized Sunday's vigil.
Speaker 2 (33:45):
A few students would speak at the vigil, including Dagne's
alleged former boyfriend and her alleged boyfriend at the time
of her death. Some of the event even claimed that
Nexts actually went by e hymn pronouns, not they them.
It was all very confusing, especially to the media, some
of which changed Dignes's pronouns again to he him Next.
Speaker 28 (34:06):
Had thrown water on them for making fun of the
way that he and a friend were dressed.
Speaker 2 (34:11):
The day after the vigil, a school walkout was organized.
Only a few dozen people showed up, almost none of
which appeared to be students.
Speaker 23 (34:19):
Well, Michelle, it wasn't a major walkout like some may
have anticipated.
Speaker 14 (34:23):
I'll move out the way.
Speaker 2 (34:24):
I will say.
Speaker 23 (34:25):
There's about maybe twenty twenty to thirty folks out there,
and a lot of them were adults just waiting to
be in support with the students who walked out.
Speaker 16 (34:33):
Not a very large crowd at all.
Speaker 2 (34:36):
Nevertheless, the legacy media made the paltry attended events into
a national story.
Speaker 19 (34:41):
Benedict's death has sparked nationwide demonstrations against anti LGBTQ rhetoric.
Speaker 13 (34:47):
From rallies in New York.
Speaker 15 (34:51):
To walkouts in Oklahoma, members of the LGBTQ community showed
their support for next Benedict.
Speaker 2 (34:59):
The national media coverage ignited by transactivists in fara off
parts of the country swelled Dagne's GOFUNDB page to over
one hundred and seventy thousand dollars. But the response of
Owassow locals after the surveillance video release signaled that the
community was likely privy to information that the rest of
the country was not, and that information would come out
(35:20):
a few weeks later. In mid March twenty twenty.
Speaker 28 (35:23):
Four, a heartbreaking update to a story we brought you
last month. The death of Oklahoma student Next Benedict has
been ruled a suicide, according to the state Medical Examiner.
Speaker 14 (35:32):
Karen that Amy's report coming into our news room just
a little while ago. It shows the team dyed of
a toxic combination of fluoxatine and diephenhydramine otherwise known as
prozac and benadryl. Also hearing from the OASA Police Department
tonight saying they suspected suicide from the beginning, but did
not want to make those thoughts known until the EMA
(35:53):
completed their report.
Speaker 2 (35:55):
America learned what many had known for a while.
Speaker 1 (35:59):
Dagne Benedict was a troubled young soul in the trans
movement alone with the entire mainstream media used her to
further their narrative. Dagne had been abandoned by her parents
at a very young age. At the time of her death,
her biological father was in prison. Sue Benedict, who we've
been calling Dagny's mother, was actually her biological grandmother, who
(36:19):
officially adopted her some time before her death. A group
representing abused children were at the adoption ceremony. Dagny Benedict
was likely the classic case of a troubled child that
turned to the predatorial transgender community that promises peace and
acceptance if their ideology is adopted, but as we've unfortunately seen,
(36:40):
that rarely pans out. A few years earlier, Dagny was
drawn to a pro trans middle school teacher that famously
resigned for posting a video that troubled many parents.
Speaker 13 (36:51):
Hey, if your parents don't love and accept you for
who you are this Christmas, then I'm your parents.
Speaker 15 (36:56):
Now.
Speaker 4 (36:56):
I'm proud of you.
Speaker 15 (36:57):
Drink some water.
Speaker 26 (36:58):
I love you fine.
Speaker 1 (36:59):
Shortly after Dagne's suicide, this teacher posted a mint memory
of Dagny, stating quote, my favorite memory of Next was
just how much of a gremlin they were. I swear
every time I would be on bus duty, I would
hear Next scream across campus, Wren, let me fight you
for your mustang. Maybe Dagny wasn't getting the kind of
help she's so desperately needed, which leads us back to
(37:29):
the question what should parents do about transgenderism. For the
sake of our kids, we need to push the medical
community to designate transgenderism as a mental disorder. Red Pilled
America has covered the history behind the mainstreaming of transgenderism.
In several episodes, and in particular, we've chronicled how the
(37:49):
American Psychiatric Association removed gender dysphoria from its official list
of mental disorders. It did so under the pressure of
LGBTQ plus activists without any long term studies justifying its removal.
By doing so, Psychiatric Association has abandoned its duty to
protect America's youth suffering from this condition. Even the legacy
(38:09):
media understands that the transgender movement as a mental stability problem.
Speaker 28 (38:14):
A survey from twenty twenty two by the Trevor Project
found that more than forty percent.
Speaker 1 (38:19):
Of youth that's LGBTQ plus youth.
Speaker 28 (38:21):
About the ages of thirteen to twenty four seriously considered suicide,
and that the rates are actually higher for transgender and
non binary children.
Speaker 1 (38:30):
Adults are free to make whatever legal life choice they'd like,
but for the sake of our children, we need to
denormalize the acceptance of this transgender ideology by re establishing
it as a mental disorder. Because if we don't, kids
that desperately need psychiatric help will instead be taught that
transgenderism is a solution to their problems even when it
(38:51):
has failed. For so many troubled souls.
Speaker 7 (38:53):
I used to believe that I was born in the
wrong body, and the adults in my life whom I
trusted affirmed my belief, and this caused me lifelong, irreversible harm.
I speak to you today as a victim of one
of the biggest medical scandals in the history of the
United States of America. I speak to you in the
hope that you will have the courage to bring the
scandal to an end and ensure that other vulnerable teenagers, children,
(39:14):
and young adults don't go through what I went through.
Speaker 2 (39:17):
Red Pilled America is an iHeartRadio original podcast. It's owned
and produced by Patrick Carrelci and me Adriana Cortez for
informed Ventures. Now you can get ad free access to
our entire catalog of episodes by becoming a backstage subscriber.
To subscribe, just visit Redpilled America dot com and could
join in the topmenu. Thanks for listening.