Study Links Marijuana Use to Risk of Cancer, Birth Defects

New research links marijuana use to cancer risk.

Writing in the scientific journal Addiction Biology, Australian researchers explored the connection between marijuana use and cell damage. The study found the cell damage caused by marijuana may contribute to cancer, birth defects, and accelerated aging.

Unfortunately, this is not the first study linking marijuana use to serious health problems.

A study published in JAMA Otolaryngology found daily marijuana use is linked to a higher risk of head and neck cancers.

Over the summer, researchers announced that using marijuana during pregnancy raises a woman’s risk of developing gestational hypertension (high blood pressure), preeclampsia, weight gain, and placental abruption.

A separate study published this year found women who used marijuana during pregnancy faced a staggering 631% greater risk of fetal death.

All of this underscores what we have said for year: Marijuana may be many things, but “harmless” simply is not one of them.

Articles appearing on this website are written with the aid of Family Council’s researchers and writers.

Federal Court Rules Indiana Can Protect Children from Sex-Change Procedures

Last week the Seventh Circuit Court of Appeals issued a ruling effectively letting the State of Indiana protect children from sex-change procedures.

Joshua Arnold with The Washington Stand reports,

The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit upheld an Indiana law protecting minors from gender transition procedures last Wednesday. The appellate court had stayed a preliminary injunction that blocked all of the law except its prohibition on gender transition surgeries in a simple order on February 27, allowing the law to take effect. Wednesday’s ruling (K.C. v. Medical Licensing Board of Indiana) included a 50-page opinion for why the court reversed the lower court ruling, vacated the preliminary injunction, and remanded the lawsuit back to the district court.

In response to the ruling, Alliance Defending Freedom Senior Counsel and Vice President of Litigation Strategy and Center for Conscience Initiatives Jonathan Scruggs said,

“Indiana rightly enacted a law that protects the health and welfare of all children—supporting their natural biological development and ensuring that children experiencing gender dysphoria have a chance for comprehensive healing and compassionate mental health support. Relying on bad science, activists and the Biden-Harris administration have pushed these harmful procedures across the country and even taken steps to prevent state legislatures from regulating these procedures. These procedures have devastated countless lives, which is why countries that were previously leaders in so-called ‘gender affirming’ care are reversing course and curtailing these experimental efforts to alter children’s bodies. The 7th Circuit was on solid ground to uphold Indiana’s law that allows children to receive the help they need—safely.”

ADF filed a friend-of-the-court brief last year asking the court to let Indiana’s law to go into effect.

This is a significant victory.

Sex-change surgeries and similar procedures can leave children sterilized and scarred for life.

Doctors do not know the long term effects that puberty blockers and cross-sex hormones might have on people, but the U.S. Food and Drug Administration was prompted to add a warning label to puberty blockers after discovering they caused some biological girls to experience brain swelling.

Three years ago a major hospital in Sweden announced that it would no longer give puberty blockers and cross-sex hormones to kids. This year the United Kingdom announced a new policy protecting children from puberty-blocking drugs.

In 2021 the Arkansas Legislature overwhelmingly passed the Save Adolescents From Experimentation (SAFE) Act — a law very similar to Indiana’s. The SAFE Act is a good law that protects children in Arkansas from cross-sex hormones, puberty blockers, and sex-reassignment surgeries.

Unfortunately, the SAFE Act has been blocked in court since 2021.

It’s good to see federal courts let Indiana protect children. We believe our federal courts ultimately will recognize that Arkansas’ SAFE act is a good law and uphold it as constitutional.

Articles appearing on this website are written with the aid of Family Council’s researchers and writers.

TikTok’s Parent Company Valued at $300 Billion, Underscoring Social Media Giant’s Influence

The Wall Street Journal reports ByteDance — the Chinese-based company that owns social media giant TikTok — is valued at $300 billion.

With approximately one billion users worldwide — including upwards of 135 million or more in the U.S. — TikTok is regarded as one of the most popular social media platforms on the planet.

The Wall Street Journal reports,

The [$300 billion] valuation came in a recent buyback offer by ByteDance, according to people familiar with the offer, and suggests the company expects its growth to continue. A law signed by President Biden earlier this year would ban TikTok in the U.S. unless ByteDance divests itself of the app by mid-January.

The article goes on to highlight the political turmoil surrounding TikTok and ByteDance.

ByteDance is headquartered in China, and has come under fire time and again for serving kids a steady “diet of darkness” on TikTok while also struggling to protect private user data from entities in China, such as the Chinese Communist Party.

Authorities in Canada recently ordered TikTok to stop operating in the country, citing national security concerns.

In September the Wall Street Journal highlighted how TikTok let accounts linked to the Chinese government spread misleading content targeting U.S. voters ahead of the 2024 election.

And earlier this year the U.S. Department of Justice sued TikTok for allegedly violating federal laws intended to protect children online.

Stories like these — and others — have raise serious concerns about TikTok’s operations.

Last year Arkansas Attorney General Tim Griffin filed two lawsuits against TikTok and its parent company ByteDance.

The A.G.’s lawsuits allege that TikTok and ByteDance failed to fully disclose that the company is subject to Chinese laws that mandate cooperation with intelligence activities of the People’s Republic of China and that TikTok aggressively collects sensitive user data. The lawsuits are ongoing in state court.

As we keep saying, social media platforms are not just websites or phone apps. These are multibillion dollar corporations owned and operated by investors and other interests. The fact that ByteDance is now valued at $300 billion and counting underscores just how powerful these tech giants have become.

Articles appearing on this website are written with the aid of Family Council’s researchers and writers.