Hillary Clinton is busy hawking yet another book, this one about “gutsy” women.

The two-time presidential loser — who may just jump into the 2020 race after all — wrote the book with daughter Chelsea. Titled “The Book of Gutsy Women: Favorite Stories of Courage and Resilience,” the book highlights the work of civil rights activist Dorothy Height, swimmer Diana Nyad, writers Rachel Carson and Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie, historian Mary Beard, LGBTQ trailblazer Edie Windsor, and Danica Roem, the first trans woman elected to a U.S. state legislature.

Hillary, 71, and Chelsea, 39, sat down with a British reporter over the weekend, and the differences in their worldviews were on display.

In an interview with The Sunday Times, journalist Decca Aitkenhead asked the pair if a person with a beard and a penis can be a “woman.” Chelsea quickly answered “yes,” but Hillary looked “uneasy,” the Daily Mail reports.

“Errr. I’m just learning about this,” Hillary said. “It’s a very big generational discussion, because this is not something I grew up with or ever saw. It’s going to take a lot more time and effort to understand what it means to be defining yourself differently.”

In her piece, Aitkenhead tells Hillary that many British feminists of Hillary’s generation “have a problem with the idea that a ‘lesbian who doesn’t want to sleep with someone who has a penis is transphobic.'”

Hillary nods in agreement, while Chelsea ‘stiffens and stares at me,’ according to Aitkenhead. The journalist then adds that many women of Hillary’s generation are uncomfortable with biological males sharing women’s bathrooms. ‘I would say that, absolutely,’ Hillary nods firmly. ‘Absolutely. Yes.’ That’s when Chelsea begins shooting a ‘furious stare’ at Aitkenhead, who points it out to her. ‘I’m a terrible actor,’ Chelsea laughs.

Chelsea then takes over, saying she supports the National Health Service’s decision to place patients into single-sex wards according to how they self-identify.

“How can you treat someone if you don’t recognize who they feel and know in their core they are?” Chelsea says. “And I strongly support children being able to play on the sports teams that match their own gender identity. I think we need to be doing everything we can to support kids in being whoever they know themselves to be and discovering who they are.”

Her mom had a bit of a different view.

“I think you’ve got to be sensitive to how difficult this is,” Hillary says. “There are women who’d say [to a trans woman], ‘You know what, you’ve never had the kind of life experiences that I’ve had. So I respect who you are, but don’t tell me you’re the same as me.’ I hear that conversation all the time.”

While liberals support even children younger than 10 deciding to transition to the other sex, a new report by Sky News says those who do often have regrets.

Twenty-eight-year-old Charlie Evans told Sky News in a recent interview that she’s spoken to “hundreds” of young people, mostly same-sex attracted women, who regret their gender transition. She also encountered an “online community of 5,000 in a similar position,” according to the network.

“I’m in communication with 19- and 20-year-olds who have had full gender reassignment surgery who wish they hadn’t, and their dysphoria hasn’t been relieved, they don’t feel better for it,” she told Sky News, adding, “I think some of the common characteristics are that they tend to be around their mid-20s, they’re mostly female and mostly same-sex attracted, and often autistic as well.”

Related: WATCH: ‘Hundreds’ Of Young People Regret Gender Transition, Seek Reversal