The topic of discussion for this Constitution Monday is gender-affirming care for children and its constitutionality. The U.S. House Judiciary Committee held a hearing last week on the topic “The Dangers and Due Process Violations of ‘Gender-Affirming Care’ for Children.” The hearing exposed how children are being abused by adults who seek to coerce them to make decisions that are life-altering and medically questionable.
Sarah Parshall Perry published an article in The Daily Signal about the hearing,
which she thought began unusually. In a podcast, “Dr. Blair Peters, a
self-described ‘queer surgeon’ at the Oregon Health & Science University in
Portland, explained that in the field of ‘gender medicine,’ they are ‘just kind
of learning and figuring out what works.” He continued by saying, “We know
almost nothing about these outcomes.”
Ranking
Democratic member Rep. Mary Scanlon (D-Pa.) blamed Republicans of trying to “motivate
right-wing voters” and impose “ultra-conservative and religious views” on other
Americans. Perry reminded her readers that “no parent has a constitutional
right to injure their own children.”
She seems to have also forgotten that the
federal government and every state and territory have child welfare laws on the
books that recognize the appropriateness of government intervention when minor
children are being subjected to physical, and in some cases, emotional harm by
their custodial parents or guardians.
In fact, a federal appellate court that
then included the late Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg held in 2007 that medical
care of any kind is not a constitutional right….
In fact, a recent decision by the U.S.
Court of Appeals for the 6th Circuit, when the court was considering
such a state ban out of Tennessee, … held that the state law did not violate either
parents’ constitutional right to direct the upbringing of their children or
constitutional protections that require all individuals to be treated equally
regardless of sex. Some have posited that this case may now be headed to the
U.S. Supreme Court.
Next up, the 11th Circuit will
hear a constitutional challenge to Florida’s gender-affirming medicine ban for
minors. In a previous case, Adams v. St. Johns County School Board, that court
determined that a school’s sex-segregated bathroom policy was not a violation
of the Constitution because (just as the Tennessee ban does) it treated all
students equally, regardless of sex.
Finding that the law that restricted “transgender”
students’ access to bathrooms that corresponded to their biological sex to be
constitutional, it may well reach the same conclusion as the 6th
Circuit when considering a law on transgender minors’ access to invasive
medical treatments.
Witnesses
at the hearing included Paula Scanlan, a former University of Pennsylvania
swimmer, who was “forced to change and shower alongside a 6’4” male swimmer
with male genitalia 18 times per week.” The female swimmers were offered psychological
“reeducation services” to help them deal with the situation.
Another
witness was Chloe Cole, “a young woman who once believed herself to be a boy
but has since ‘detransitioned.’ At the age of 15, Cole had a double mastectomy
and other “medical interventions” to “treat” her gender dysphoria. She claims
to be a victim of the “biggest medical scandal in America” and that her parents
were coerced into signing a consent form with the question, “Would you rather
have a dead daughter or a living [transgender] son?”
Additional violations of parents’ rights
are also occurring in school districts that are hiding from parents the social
gender transitions of their children and the use of their children’s “preferred
pronouns.”
What’s clear from Thursday’s hearing is
that the constitutional right of parents to direct the upbringing of their
children is indeed being violated. But those violations are not occurring when
states protect minors from getting experimental “gender-affirming” treatments.
The violations are transpiring in blue states that are cutting parents out of
the equation altogether.
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