Skip to content
Search AI Powered

Latest Stories

Chasten Buttigieg Rips 'Moms For Liberty' After They Got Totally Owned By '60 Minutes'

Chasten Buttigieg; Screenshot of Tiffany Justice and Tina Descovich
Scott Olson/Getty Images; CNN

After '60 Minutes' reporter Scott Pelley pressed the 'Moms for Liberty' co-founders on their choice of the word 'groomer,' Buttigieg chimed in to call them out for their shady and ignorant tactics.

After 60 Minutes reporter Scott Pelley pressed the founders of the far-right organization Moms for Liberty on their use of the word "groomer," educator and activist Chasten Buttigieg—the husband of Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg—called out their ignorant antics.

Moms for Liberty was founded by Tina Descovich and Tiffany Justice, two Florida Republican women who ran for school board seats and gained notoriety for railing against COVID-19 restrictions in schools, including mask and vaccine mandates.


The duo and their supporters have falsely alleged that members of the LGBTQ+ community have been "grooming" children and pushed anti-LGBTQ+ legislation in many conservative states based on these lies.

Throughout the conversation, Justice and Descovich avoided Pelley's questions, consistently sticking to their rehearsed talking points, even when those points appeared unrelated to the broader context of the interview.

As an illustration, when addressing concerns about "rogue teachers in America's classrooms" accused of "indoctrinating children into ideology," Descovich responded vaguely, stating, "Let's just say children in America cannot read." After Pelley displayed messages from their organization on X that accused people of "grooming" without evidence, Justice said parents do not want to "co-parent with the government."

And when Pelley noted that "grooming" is not a word any organization "would want to take on," Justice flipped through a stack of papers and issued a weak defense, saying Moms for Liberty had done polling into how Americans feel "on the issue of parental rights and what’s happening in our schools."

Chasten Buttigieg quickly took note of this and pointed out just how unprepared Descovich and Justice were to be challenged during the interview:

"They literally have to look at printed talking points."

You can see his post below.

Many echoed his criticisms.


Pelley's 60 Minutes report—which included voiceovers noting that "in a tactic of outrage politics, Moms for Liberty takes a kernel of truth and concludes these examples are not rare mistakes but a plot to sexualize children"—also highlights the electoral setbacks experienced by Moms for Liberty.

Despite spirited campaigning, two-thirds of the 166 school board candidates endorsed by the group were unsuccessful in the 2023 elections.

The group provided endorsements to numerous candidates across school districts spanning from Alaska to North Carolina. However, its history of supporting book bans, resisting racially inclusive educational content, and promoting anti-LGBTQ+ messages failed to resonate with voters across multiple elections.

More from Trending

Nicki Minaj and Donald Trump
Win McNamee/Getty Images

Trump's 'Gold' Gift To Nicki Minaj Certainly Seems To Explain Her Sudden Pivot To MAGA

Rapper Nicki Minaj made headlines this week for declaring herself President Donald Trump's "number one fan" as he launched his savings accounts for newborns—and now she's gotten a telling gift for her trouble.

Minaj appeared Wednesday at the Trump Accounts Summit in Washington, D.C., where she praised Trump’s rollout of investment accounts for U.S.-born babies.

Keep Reading Show less
A man in a  suit with a red tie and a pocket square
selective focus photography of person holding black smartphone
Photo by Dane Deaner on Unsplash

People Break Down The Most Overrated 'Adult Goals' People Chase

As children, we begin to grow an image of how our life will turn out.

Usually involving a financially lucrative career, a good-looking spouse who adores us, and a magazine cover worthy house.

Keep Reading Show less
Screenshots from @kellymengg's TikTok video
@kellymengg/TikTok

Woman's Story About Plane Passenger Refusing To Lower Window Shade Sparks Heated Flight Etiquette Debate

Though arriving at a destination can be fun and exciting, traveling itself is often exhausting and annoying, especially when we're made to feel uncomfortable along the way.

TikToker Kelly Meng launched a heated debate on TikTok after she shared a story about taking a 15-hour flight next to a woman who refused to do anything but what she wanted with the window shade next to her.

Keep Reading Show less
Zohran Mamdani
Lev Radin/Pacific Press/LightRocket via Getty Images

'New York Post' Dragged After Bizarrely Criticizing Zohran Mamdani's 'Poor Snow Shoveling Form'

The first major winter storm of 2026, which at one point spanned over 2,000 miles, dumped record levels of snow on New York City.

Central Park reported a record 11.4 inches for the day and the most snow since 2022. In Manhattan, Washington Heights almost hit 15 inches, while Brooklyn saw widespread totals of 10 to 12 inches.

Keep Reading Show less
Ben Affleck Confesses Why He And Matt Damon Added Random Gay Sex Scenes To 'Good Will Hunting' Script
Arturo Holmes/WireImage via Getty Images

Ben Affleck Confesses Why He And Matt Damon Added Random Gay Sex Scenes To 'Good Will Hunting' Script

Who knew the iconic line “How do you like them apples?” might be spiritually adjacent to a stack of random gay sex scenes that never made it into Good Will Hunting? At least, that’s how its writers—Boston buddies Ben Affleck and Matt Damon—have described one of their more chaotic attempts to figure out who was actually reading their script.

For anyone somehow unfamiliar with the Oscar-winning Affleck-Damon bromance: the two met as kids in Cambridge, Massachusetts—Affleck was 8, Damon was 10—and grew up a block and a half apart. They bonded over acting, moved in together after high school, and started grinding through auditions.

Keep Reading Show less