California Is First State to Ban Gay ‘Cure’ for Minors
nytimes.comCalifornia has become the first state to ban the use for minors of disputed therapies to “overcome” homosexuality, a step hailed by gay rights groups across the country that say the therapies have caused dangerous emotional harm to gay and lesbian teenagers.
“This bill bans nonscientific ‘therapies’ that have driven young people to depression and suicide,” Gov. Jerry Brown said in a statement on Saturday after he signed the bill into law. “These practices have no basis in science or medicine, and they will now be relegated to the dustbin of quackery.”
The law, which is to take effect on Jan. 1, states that no “mental health provider” shall provide minors with therapy intended to change their sexual orientation, including efforts to “change behaviors or gender expressions, or to eliminate or reduce sexual or romantic attractions or feelings toward individuals of the same sex.”
The law was sponsored by State Senator Ted W. Lieu and supported by a long list of medical and psychological societies, as well by state and national advocates for gay rights. Also speaking up for the ban were former patients who described emotional scars they said they were left with after being pushed into the therapy by their parents and finding that they could not change their sexual orientation or did not want to.
But some therapists and conservative religious leaders who promote methods that they say can reduce homosexual desire have condemned the new law as a violation of free choice. They say that it will harm young people who want to fight homosexual attractions on religious or other grounds and warn that it will lead more people to seek help from untrained amateurs.
The use of harsh aversion techniques, like electric shock or nausea-inducing drugs, to combat homosexual desires has largely disappeared. But during the last three decades, some psychologists have refined a theory of “reparative therapy,” which ties homosexual desires to emotional wounds in early childhood and, in some cases, to early sexual abuse.
These therapists say that with proper treatment, thousands of patients have succeeded in reducing their homosexual attraction and in enhancing heterosexual desire, though most therapists acknowledge that total “cures” are rare. But their methods have come under growing attack from gays who say the therapy has led to guilt, hopelessness and anger.
Reparative therapists, a small minority within the mental health profession, united in 1992 in the National Association for Research and Therapy on Homosexuality, based in Encino, Calif. The group did not immediately comment on the new California law, but its leaders have previously attacked the legislation as based on politics, not science, and said they would consider challenging it in court as an unjustified intrusion into professional practice.
[Read more at link]
Btw, if you’re a proponent of ex-gay ‘therapies’, you really don’t deserve to call yourself a mental health professional. Just sayin’.
Interestingly, if the law also bans cures targeting gender expression, then I’m assuming this would apply to therapies attempting to ‘cure’ trans* and gender nonconforming minors as well?
Ex-Gay Conversion Therapy May Become Illegal in California!!!
huffingtonpost.comA first-of-its-kind ban on a controversial form of psychotherapy aimed at making gay people straight is speeding through the California statehouse.
Supporters say the legislation, which passed its final Senate committee Tuesday, is necessary because such treatments are ineffective and harmful. “This therapy can be dangerous,” said the bill’s author Sen. Ted Lieu. The Torrance Democrat added the treatments can “cause extreme depression and guilt” that sometimes leads to suicide.
Conservative religious groups emphatically reject that view of sexual orientation therapy and say the ban would interfere with parents’ rights to seek appropriate psychological care for their children.
The bill would prohibit so-called reparative therapy for minors and obligate adults seeking the treatment to sign a release form that states that the counseling is ineffectual and possibly dangerous.
Representatives of the National Association for Research and Therapy of Homosexuality on Tuesday called the bill a piece of social engineering masquerading as a solution to a clinical problem.
David Pickup, who is registered with the California Board of Psychology, said the bill would prevent people from recovering from trauma of sexual abuse.
“Any counselor worth his salt knows that homosexual feelings commonly occur in boys as a result of abuses,” he said. “I should know because I was one of those boys.”
The debate comes as gay rights issues take the spotlight around the nation.
Over the weekend, Vice President Joe Biden said he is “absolutely comfortable” with same-sex couples getting the same rights as heterosexual couples.
In North Carolina on Tuesday, voters weighed in on an amendment defining marriage as solely between a man and a woman. And in Colorado, a civil union bill faced a looming deadline in the state Legislature.
And conversion therapy penetrated the national consciousness last year when former Republican presidential candidate Michele Bachmann was questioned over whether her husband’s Christian counseling business provided services that attempted to change gays and lesbians.
The California bill would prohibit so-called reparative therapy for minors and obligate adults to sign a release form that states that the counseling is ineffective and possibly dangerous.
Interest in the religion-based therapy appears to have surged in recent years, sparking debates about whether sexual orientation is an immutable characteristic.
Exodus International, the world’s largest Christian referral network dealing with homosexuality, now steers people to 260 groups across the country, up from about 100 a decade ago. The organization has 35 ministries and churches scattered around California, from the Central Valley to the U.S.-Mexico border.
Conservative religious leaders say it is important for families to have access to conversion therapy services as teens first awaken to their sexual orientation.
“When I was struggling with those things in the early ’80s, the church didn’t seem like it had a place for me,” said Alan Chambers, the president of Exodus International.
Mainstream mental health organizations say people shouldn’t be seeking out these ministries.
The American Psychological Association said in 2009 that mental health professionals should not tell gay clients they can become straight through therapy.
The association cited research suggesting that efforts to produce the change could lead to depression and suicidal tendencies, and stated that no solid evidence exists that such change is possible.
The American Counseling Association and American Psychiatric Association have also disavowed the therapy. The psychiatric association removed homosexuality from its list of mental disorders nearly 30 years ago.
Last month, the author of a widely-cited 2001 study supportive of the notion that “highly motivated” people can change their sexual orientation retracted his study and apologized to the gay community.
Peter Drake, 55, testified Tuesday that he sought out conversion therapy in an effort to save his 20-year marriage, and the years of trying to change himself nearly drove him to suicide.
“I am left-handed and I am gay,” he said. “I could learn to write with my other hand, but that is not who I am.”
Gay rights advocates say a ban like the one proposed in California could represent a turning point and inspire similar legislation in other states.
The measure, which moves to the Senate, would likely face legal challenges from opponents who say it is unconstitutional and raises the specter of children being removed from conservative families.
Lieu says he addressed free speech issues in AB1172 by excluding clergy and other people who are not medical professionals from the legislation.
The practice has garnered attention in past years as teens sent by their parents to conversion therapy programs have shared their stories online.
Among the lawmakers who approved the bill Tuesday was Sen. Mark Leno, D-San Francisco. Leno said his parents sent him to a therapist when he first told them he might be gay, and it was only because the therapist did not pathologize his sexual orientation that he was able to come out of the closet.
“There are many that are trapped in this horror situation,” he said. “And it can have extraordinarily negative impacts.”
Former Exodus chairman apologizes, renounces ‘reparative therapy’ – LGBTQ Nation
lgbtqnation.comJohn Paulk, the former chairman of Exodus International, a Christian ministry devoted to performing controversial gay-to-straight “reparative therapy” has formally renounced his past and says he is “truly, truly sorry” for the pain he’s caused by advocating that gays could change their sexual orientation through prayer and therapy…
Ex-Gay OK! Homosexuality: "Psychogenic, Preventable, Treatable Disorder"
thenewcivilrightsmovement.comWow… apparently this psycho is trying to start an “ex-gay” “reparative therapy” clinic in DC. I am hoping this is not legal…
When Facts are Misconstrued: Understanding Homophobia
Coming out to myself was probably one of the hardest things I’ve ever had to do. It isn’t something I asked for—rather, it’s something that I have tried to keep locked up as long as possible. It wasn’t until my second year of Biola that this cage that I built around my sexuality shattered. There came a point in which I could no longer deny that I was capable of developing feelings for guys, girls, and any gender in between. For a long time, I considered myself lucky because I thought just acting straight was the solution and that I could deny whatever I felt for girls. It never worked out like I wanted though. Instead, I hated myself more when I felt something for a girl. I was trying so hard to make the same-sex attractions go away, yet they were still there, even if I tried to fill my head with guys.
A few days ago I went into the health center bathroom and saw a booklet entitled “When Passions Are Confused: Understanding Homosexuality.” I remembered seeing this before but never had the courage to pick one up till now. What I read greatly saddened me; I thought of the self-hating state I was in only a year ago and how this pamphlet would have greatly multiplied my pain and confusion. Biola claimed to offer guidance and support to gay students, but, in actuality, they merely offer reparative therapy literature. Unless you meet with administration about this issue, gay students are recommended to attend reparative therapy. Biola has defined “support and guidance” as telling us that our sexualities are evil, empty, sinful, and a gateway to other harmful actions. I know that many Biolans may not hear this message, but to those who are sensitive, like me, it’s everywhere.
This booklet claims that those who are homosexual must drink and do drugs to be able to “do what they do” (i.e. engage in homosexual behavior). It also claims that despair is a natural consequence of homosexual behavior—thus they conveniently conclude that the high suicide rate in the gay community is the result of our behavior and not societal discrimination. Furthermore, it claims that homosexual desires can be overcome by a passion for God, and that it is only a “myth” that someone can’t change their sexual orientation. They claim that homosexuality is due to abuse and bad parenting, not what social and biological science has found: “no findings have emerged that permit scientists to conclude that sexual orientation is determined by any particular factor or factors.” 1.
Had I read this before coming to terms with my sexuality I would have been convinced that on account of my orientation I should feel empty and that I wasn’t passionate enough for Christ. I would have blamed myself even more for not being able to change. The misinformation in this booklet can only add to the self-hatred many of us feel when struggling to understand our sexual orientation.
As a final note, I would like to ask Biola how they can claim they “never have, nor do we currently endorse, reparative therapy” 2 when Exodus International is advertised in these booklets. While Exodus International has recently claimed to no longer endorse reparative therapy, during the time that Exodus would have encouraged reparative therapy, Biola offered these pamphlets to students. Biola chose to put these in the health center thus endorsing Exodus and their methods. This pamphlet endorses the rhetoric of reparative therapy, making unfounded claims that have been disproven by the American Psychological Association and found to be damaging to emotional and spiritual health of gay students. 3
If Biola insists that they have never endorsed reparative therapy, they must explain their repeated invitations to spokesmen for reparative therapy such as Sy Rogers, and Mike Haley 4 5. And they must explain why they offer reparative therapy literature to students. We ask Biola University to cease their endorsement of reparative therapy, and to side with the American Psychological Association, the American Psychiatric Association, and the National Association of Social Workers in admonishing such practice.
The Biola Queer Underground has heard many stories from students pressured to attend reparative therapy by Biola University. If you want your story to be told, please send us an email at biola.underground@gmail.com
1 http://www.apa.org/helpcenter/sexual-orientation.aspx
2 http://eaglevision.biola.edu/?p=571
3 http://www.apa.org/pi/lgbt/resources/just-the-facts.aspx
4 http://studentlife.biola.edu/spiritual-development/chapel/2008-torrey-conference
5 http://studentlife.biola.edu/spiritual-development/chapel/chapel-makeups
Day 21 - Political LGBT issue that is closest to you or affects you most
A political LGBT issue that affects me the most? Hmm… I hadn’t really thought about that. I can see marriage being an issue, but I plan to move to New York anyway…
The only political issue I see running for me is the “it’s part of my religion so I can say it” bullshit politicians have been spewing as of late.
No, Michelle, LGBT individuals do not need reparative therapy for God to accept them into Heaven. (The War of 1812 didn’t start in the 1700s, either.)
No, Rick, having gays and lesbians openly serve in the military has absolutely no relevance to the nonexistent restriction against celebrating Christmas or prayer in school. (You just give Texans an even worse reputation by saying stupid shit like that.)
No, any of you candidates for president bashing gays for votes, being anti-gay and dragging religion into politics will not get you far in the long run.
So, yeah. I love God, but some of the people he created are absolute lunatics.
Judge temporarily blocks Calif. gay therapy law
sfgate.comSAN FRANCISCO (AP) — A federal judge on Monday temporarily blocked California from enforcing a first-of-its-kind law that bars licensed psychotherapists from working to change the sexual orientations of gay minors, but he limited the scope of his order to just the three providers who have appealed to him to overturn the measure.
U.S. District Court Judge William Shubb made a decision just hours after a hearing on the issue, ruling that the First Amendment rights of psychiatrists, psychologists and other mental health professionals who engage in “reparative” or “conversion” therapy outweigh concern that the practice poses a danger to young people.
“Even if SB 1172 is characterized as primarily aimed at regulating conduct, it also extends to forms of (conversion therapy) that utilize speech and, at a minimum, regulates conduct that has an incidental effect on speech,” Shubb wrote.
The judge also disputed the California Legislature’s finding that trying to change young people’s sexual orientation puts them at risk for suicide or depression, saying it was based on “questionable and scientifically incomplete studies.”
The law, which was passed by the Legislature and signed by Gov. Jerry Brown in October, states that therapists and counselors who use “sexual orientation change efforts” on clients under 18 would be engaging in unprofessional conduct and subject to discipline by state licensing boards. It is set to take effect on Jan. 1.
Although the ruling is a setback for the law’s supporters, the judge softened the impact of his decision by saying that it applies only to three people — psychiatrist Anthony Duk, marriage and family therapist Donald Welch, and Aaron Bitzer, a former patient who is studying to become a counselor who specializes in clients who are unhappy being gay.
The exemption for them will remain in place only until Shubb can hold a trial on the merits of their case, although in granting their request for an injunction, the judge noted he thinks they would prevail in getting the law struck down on constitutional grounds.
Bitzer, Duk and Welch were represented by the Pacific Justice Institute, a Christian legal group. President Brad Dacus said he thought Shubb’s ruling would have a chilling effect that would keep the licensing boards that regulate mental health professionals from targeting other practitioners.
“If there are any, we can easily add them to the case as a plaintiff,” Dacus said. “We know we will have to have another hearing on the merits, but to be able to get a preliminary injunction at this stage is very telling as to the final outcome, and I’m very encouraged by it.”
Read more: http://www.sfgate.com/news/us/article/Judge-temporarily-blocks-Calif-gay-therapy-law-4088434.php#ixzz2E5nTx0n3


