Court Upholds Missouri Law Protecting Children from ‘Transgender’ Medical Interventions
A Missouri court has upheld a state law protecting children from harmful and damaging transgender medical interventions.
On June 7, 2023, Missouri Gov. Mike Parson signed the “Missouri Save Adolescents from Experimentation Act” (SAFE Act) into law.
The measure states:
Shortly after the law was enacted, Lambda Legal, the ACLU of Missouri, and law firm Bryan Cave Leighton Paisner filed a lawsuit in Cole County Circuit Court to stop the law’s implementation.
In a 74-page opinion issued on Nov 25., Judge R. Craig Carter upheld Missouri’s SAFE Act as constitutional. He did so after a two-week trial, finding that legislatures have broad authority to regulate medical procedures.
He pointed out that according to the Plaintiff’s arguments against the SAFE Act, “Any person – including a minor – would be able to do anything from meth, to ecstasy, to abortion as long as a single medical professional was willing to recommend it.”
The judge also took the opportunity to blast transgender medical procedures being performed on young children. Judge Carter wrote,
Judge Carter pointed out that evidence shows a vast majority of minors who experience gender dysphoria outgrow the condition as they reach adulthood.
He continued,
After examining relevant Supreme Court and appellate court precedent, the judge concluded, “Accordingly, this Court finds that Missouri SB 49 is constitutional.”
Missouri Attorney General Bailey issued a statement following the ruling: “The Court has left Missouri’s law banning child mutilation in place, a resounding victory for our children. We are the first state in the nation to successfully defend such a law at the trial court level.” He added,
Likewise, Alliance Defending Freedom Senior Counsel Hal Frampton lauded the judge’s ruling in a statement,
All children have the right to their bodily integrity and an intact sexual identity. Children struggling with sexual identity confusion deserve true compassion and real support including prayer, counseling and community – not harmful drugs, hormones and surgeries.
We commend Missouri – and Judge Carter – for upholding and protecting the rights of children.
The case is Noe v. Parson.
To speak with a family help specialist or request resources, please call us at 1-800-A-FAMILY (232-6459).
If you or someone you know need help dealing with the transgender issue, check out Focus on the Family’s Transgender Resources page here.
Focus on the Family also offers a one-time complimentary consultation with our ministry’s professionally trained counseling staff. The consultation is free due to generous donor support. To reach Focus on the Family’s counseling service by phone, call 1-800-A-Family (232-6459) weekdays 6:00 a.m. to 8:00 p.m. (Mountain Time). Please be prepared to leave your contact information for a counselor or chaplain to return a call to you as soon as possible. Alternatively, you can fill out our Counseling Consultation Request Form.
We also offer local referrals for licensed counselors who align with the mission and values of Focus on the Family.
Related articles and resources:
Counseling Consultation & Referrals
Addressing Gender Identity with Honesty and Compassion
The Journey Back to My True Identity
Court Upholds Ban on ‘Transgender’ Interventions for Minors in Missouri
Photo from Shutterstock.
’Tis the season for holiday reading!
Check out Daily Citizen’s cheery winter reads.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Zachary Mettler is a writer/analyst for the Daily Citizen at Focus on the Family. In his role, he writes about current political issues, U.S. history, political philosophy, and culture. Mettler earned his Bachelor’s degree from William Jessup University and is an alumnus of the Young Leaders Program at The Heritage Foundation. In addition to the Daily Citizen, his written pieces have appeared in the Daily Wire, the Washington Times, the Washington Examiner, Newsweek, Townhall, the Daily Signal, the Christian Post, Charisma News and other outlets.
Related Posts
The FBI Deeply Needs Reform – and Fast
December 6, 2024