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Health, Longevity & Biohacking

Young Woman Details Permanent Sexual Dysfunction From SSRI Use Starting Age Seven

Modern Wisdom · Something Strange Is Happening To Gen Z - Isabel Brown - #1106 · June 4, 2026
Young Woman Details Permanent Sexual Dysfunction From SSRI Use Starting Age Seven
Modern Wisdom
Modern Wisdom
Something Strange Is Happening To Gen Z - Isabel Brown - #1106
"Danielle had been prescribed SSRIs at 7 years old for some form of depressive symptoms. Her doctors insisted, you need this medication or you're going to die. She took them for about 15 years before finally deciding to quit. Now she has permanent brain damage. She's dealing with sexual dysfunction and chemical asexuality. Many people are calling these drugs chemical castrating drugs."
Brown recounted meeting a woman prescribed antidepressants at age seven who now suffers permanent neurological damage and complete genital numbness after 15 years of use. She compared SSRIs to puberty blockers as chemical castration, noting 17% of 18-24 year-olds currently take antidepressants. The testimony highlighted a largely ignored medical crisis affecting young women's lifelong sexual function and mental health.

About this episode

Conservative commentator and author Isabel Brown joined Chris Williamson for a wide-ranging conversation examining the crisis of femininity in Generation Z, arguing it will eclipse the masculinity crisis within a decade. Brown, who holds multiple degrees and works with Turning Point USA, detailed an escalating cultural attack on womanhood more sinister than previous assaults on masculinity—one that targets women's brief biological window with SSRI overprescription, gender transition advocacy, and anti-family messaging. The discussion opened with disturbing revelations about female looksmaxing subcultures where girls as young as 13 receive surgical advice and extreme body modification recommendations. Brown shared testimony from a woman prescribed SSRIs at age seven who now suffers permanent sexual dysfunction, comparing antidepressants to chemical castration and noting 17% of young adults currently take them. She cited obscure 1963 Congressional testimony where the American Communist Party outlined cultural subversion goals—from degrading art to discrediting families—that she argues shaped modern society. The conversation pivoted to Gen Z's unexpected religious revival, with Brown describing overflowing Latin Mass attendance in New York as the hottest club in the city, attributing it to young people's rejection of moral relativism. She defended traditional family formation against mainstream feminist narratives, recounting backlash from The View after telling CPAC attendees to have more children than they think they can afford. On politics, Brown disputed claims that Trump's approval collapse to 34% represents young voters abandoning conservatism, instead arguing they're frustrated Republicans aren't conservative enough on immigration, housing, and Planned Parenthood funding. She expressed optimism about Gen Z leading a cultural and political realignment toward traditionalism, marriage, and faith—a prediction she made in her 2024 book that appeared validated when young men delivered Trump's victory.

Key takeaways

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