Chris Beck
© AFP via Getty ImagesChris Beck announced that he is detransitioning after coming out as trans a decade ago.
A retired Navy SEAL who became famous nearly 10 years ago after coming out as transgender announced he is detransitioning and called on Americans to "wake up" about how transgender health services are hurting children.

"Everything you see on CNN with my face, do not even believe a word of it," Chris Beck, formerly known as Kristin Beck, told conservative influencer Robby Starbuck in an interview published earlier this month. "Everything that happened to me for the last ten years destroyed my life. I destroyed my life. I'm not a victim. I did this to myself, but I had help."

"I take full responsibility," he continued. "I went on CNN and everything else, and that's why I'm here right now, I'm trying to correct that."

Beck gained notoriety in 2013 when he spoke with CNN's Anderson Cooper about transitioning to a woman.

"I was used ... I was very naive, I was in a really bad way, and I got taken advantage of. I got propagandized. I got used badly by a lot of people who had knowledge way beyond me. They knew what they were doing. I didn't," he said during the interview.

Beck served in the US Navy for 20 years, including on SEAL Team Six. He was deployed 13 times and received more than 50 medals and ribbons for his service.

Beck said he's speaking out about transgenderism to protect children in the current political climate, where there are gender clinics "over all of America."


"There are thousands of gender clinics being put up over all of America," he said. "As soon as [kids] go in and say, 'I'm a tomboy or this makes me feel comfortable' and then a psychologist says, 'oh, you're transgender'. And then the next day you're on hormones - the same hormones they are using for medical castration for pedophiles. Now they are giving this to healthy 13-year-olds."

"Does this seem right," he asked. "This is why I am trying to tell America to wake up."

Beck said that when he began transitioning, it took just an hour-long meeting at Veterans Affairs to be offered hormones.

"I walked into a psychologist's office [and] in one day I have a letter in my hand saying I was transgender. I was authorized for hormones. I was authorized all this other stuff," Beck said.

"I had so much going wrong in my system when I started taking those," he added. "Some of that was paid for by the VA, and I'm sorry to the American people that I did that."

Beck said he has been off of hormones for about seven years now.

"This is a billion-dollar industry between psychologists, between surgeries, between hormones, between chemicals, between follow-up treatments," he continued. "There are thousands of gender clinics popping up all over our country. And each of those gender clinics is going to be pulling in probably over $50 million."

Fox News Digital reached out to Beck and CNN on Sunday but did not immediately receive replies.