US Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth on Wednesday elicited instant ridicule after he unveiled a new plan to offer military personnel testosterone injections.

In a video announcement, Hegseth said he was authorizing a screening program to ensure US soldiers “have the right testosterone levels” to perform at their “absolute best.”

“It’s well established science that, as we age, testosterone levels often drop,” the US defense secretary explained. “Under the supervision of our world-class medical professionals, warfighters aged 30 and older are going to be tested annually as part of their periodic health assessment.”

The High-T Department of War. pic.twitter.com/hlAUq3j2cD
— Secretary of War Pete Hegseth (@SecWar) July 15, 2026

Personnel who are found lacking in testosterone, Hegseth continued, would get recommendations for hormone injections, though he emphasized that this would be entirely optional.

“This initiative, it’s not about artificial enhancement,” Hegseth emphasized. “It’s about restoring and optimizing your natural capabilities.”

Critics on social media responded to Hegseth’s new testosterone injection plan with mockery.

Journalist Amanda Katz joked that Hegseth’s plan was “literally gender-affirming care” of the kind that Hegseth halted for transgender service members last year.

Rep. Summer Lee (D-Pa.) similarly asked Hegseth if the new program means that “now y’all support gender-affirming care?”

Rep. Pramila Jayapal (D-Wash.) said that the Hegseth initiative “is gender affirming care and it completely debunks all of Republicans’ attacks on trans people.”

Fred Wellman, a Democratic candidate for Congress in Missouri and a veteran of the US Army, called Hegseth’s initiative “the absolute dumbest thing imaginable for the secretary of defense to be focused on.”

“We are literally at war and this idiot is in his office doing two camera make up videos on testosterone,” Wellman added. “What a complete clown show. I’m so sorry for our poor service members who have to deal with this ridiculous man.”

Attorney Bradley Moss likened the Hegseth plan to the plot of Soldier, a 1998 movie starring Kurt Russell that bombed with both critics and audiences.

Moss added, however, that Hegseth’s idea appeared even “stupider” than the movie.

Attorney Will Stancil wondered if Hegseth’s testosterone program might finally push some military personnel over the edge.

“Without a hint of sarcasm I think he might get himself fragged eventually,” Stancil wrote.


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  • Archangel1313@lemmy.ca
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    2 hours ago

    Lol! Can you just imagine all those big, burly Marines marching around with their juicy man-boobs and fat swollen ankles?

    • Canaconda@lemmy.ca
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      1 hour ago

      I could be wrong but I don’t think steroids really builds rucking physique. Excess muscle mass means more weight to carry and higher caloric needs.

      • assembly@lemmy.world
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        30 minutes ago

        I’m no expert but I think the soviets used testosterone in their distance running athletes and found it very helpful. It is banned in cycling and other cardio-centric sports where additional mass is not helpful so I’d wager it does something beneficial. I could be wrong though as I’m relying on a documentary I watched like 20 years ago.

        • Canaconda@lemmy.ca
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          19 minutes ago

          distance running athletes and found it very helpful

          Marathons are not rucking. Rucking you’re carrying 60lbs of gear over uneven terrain.

          Long distance running you basically expend your entire glucose supply mid run. I just don’t think it’s straight line comparable to rucking where you have to maintain glucose levels in your muscles.