Three-Judge Panel Leaves Arkansas’ SAFE Act Blocked for Now

On Thursday a three-judge panel of the Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals ruled that Arkansas’ Save Adolescents From Experimentation (SAFE) Act will remain blocked while a lawsuit over the act progresses.

The decision prevents the State of Arkansas from enforcing the SAFE Act for the time being.

The Arkansas Legislature overwhelmingly passed the Save Adolescents From Experimentation (SAFE) Act last year.

The SAFE Act is an excellent law that protects children from sex-reassignment procedures, puberty blockers, and cross-sex hormones.

Researchers do not know the long term effects that puberty blockers and cross-sex hormones can have on kids.

This summer the U.S. Food and Drug Administration added a warning label to puberty blockers indicating that they can cause vision loss and swelling of the brain.

Stories like these are part of the reason many experts agree that giving puberty blockers and cross-sex hormones to children is experimental, at best.

That is also why a major hospital in Sweden announced last year that it would no longer administer puberty blockers and cross-sex hormones to children.

Unfortunately, the ACLU and others filed a lawsuit against the SAFE Act last summer, before the law officially took effect.

Several business interests and the Biden-Harris Administration also joined the fight against Arkansas’ SAFE Act.

U.S. District Judge James Moody temporarily blocked the state from enforcing the law while the lawsuit progresses. The lawsuit is set to go to trial in October.

Arkansas’ Attorney General asked the Eighth Circuit to lift his order so that the state can start enforcing the law right away.

Judges James B. Loken, Jane Kelly, and Katherine M. Menendez heard arguments in the case last June.

President George H. W. Bush appointed Judge Loken to the Eighth Circuit, and he has served there since 1990.

Judge Kelly is one of President Obama’s appointees, and has been on the court since 2013.

Judge Menendez was appointed to the federal district court by President Biden last year.

On Thursday the panel ruled that the state cannot enforce the law at this time.

This is a very bad ruling. Children should not be subjected to sex-reassignment procedures. Researchers do not know the long term effects puberty blockers and cross-sex hormones can have on kids. The panel’s decision today fails to protect the children of Arkansas.

The SAFE Act is commonsense legislation that protects children. It received overwhelming support from the Arkansas Legislature. Most voters in Arkansas support the law as well, according to polling by Talk Business & Politics and Hendrix College. Arkansans understand this is a good law. Our federal courts should as well.

Arkansas’ SAFE Act protects children. We believe federal courts ultimately will recognize that fact and uphold this good law as constitutional.

U.K. Transgender Clinic Forced to Close

According to the BBC, the U.K.’s “only dedicated gender identity clinic” for youth has been ordered to shut down. The reason is not a lack of demand. In fact, referrals for “treatment” are 20 times higher than 10 years ago.  

Rather, the clinic has received wide criticism from an independent report of their practices. Former patient Kiera Bell, now 25, was prescribed puberty blockers at age 16. She underwent a double mastectomy at age 20. She has now changed her mind about the procedures and says that doctors “should have challenged” her thinking, especially at such a young age.  

A former consultant psychiatrist to the center agrees: “Some children have got the double problem of living with the wrong treatment, and the original problems weren’t addressed—with complex problems like trauma, depression, large instances of autism.” 

While countries like the U.K. are questioning these wrongly named “gender affirmation” treatments, clinics, academics, and the executive branch of the government in the U.S. have only doubled down. We should stop now. The rising tide of those who are expressing regret is quickly becoming an ocean. 

Copyright 2024 by the Colson Center for Christian Worldview. Reprinted from BreakPoint.org with permission.

U.K. Transgender Clinic Faces Possibility of Lawsuits From 1,000 Families

A U.K. clinic that prescribed puberty blockers and cross-sex hormones to children for years now faces the possibility of lawsuits from upwards of 1,000 families.

The United Kingdom’s only “dedicated gender clinic”—that is, a clinic that does nothing but transgender procedures—for youth was ordered to close following allegations by a whistleblower and an independent review of the facility.

The BBC reports that the health staff at the facility “felt under pressure to adopt an ‘unquestioning affirmative approach'” to children with gender dysphoria, and that the clinic failed to consider other mental health problems that these children might have.

BBC highlighted the case of 25-year-old Keira Bell. As a teenager, the clinic prescribed her puberty blockers and testosterone shots. At 20 she underwent irreversible transgender surgery. Since then, she has changed her mind and argued that the U.K.’s gender clinic “should have challenged her more over her decision to transition.”

Now the Daily Mail reports that the clinic could face lawsuits from upwards of 1,000 patients and families “who claim they were rushed into taking life-altering puberty blockers.”

The Daily Mail reports,

Dr. Hilary Cass told NHS England there is no way of knowing if the medication may ‘disrupt’ the process of children deciding on their gender identity, rather than ‘buying time’ for them.

She also raised concerns that the drugs could interrupt the process of the brain maturing, affecting children’s ability to exercise judgment.

Her findings raise the prospect that patients treated at the [transgender clinic] and their parents may now sue the NHS for compensation.

They could try to prove they were damaged by the medication, which staff at the centre are said to have claimed was ‘fully reversible’ despite a lack of evidence.

The patients may also claim they could not have given informed consent to take the drugs given the lack of knowledge about their long-term effects.

Last year Karolinska Hospital in Sweden, one of the world’s most renowned medical establishments, decided to stop prescribing puberty-blockers to minors.

The hospital noted that giving puberty blockers and cross-sex hormones to children “should be regarded as experimental.”

Finland’s Council for Choices in Health Care has reached the same conclusion as well, writing, “In light of available evidence, gender reassignment of minors is an experimental practice.”

In July the U.S. Food and Drug Administration added a warning label to puberty blockers after six girls developed symptoms of tumor-like masses in the brain.

In 2021 the Arkansas Legislature passed the Save Adolescence From Experimentation (SAFE) Act. The law protects children in Arkansas from puberty blockers, cross-sex hormones, and sex-change procedures.

Unfortunately, the ACLU and others filed a lawsuit against the SAFE Act last summer, before the law officially took effect.

Several business interests and the Biden-Harris Administration also joined the fight against Arkansas’ SAFE Act.

U.S. District Judge James Moody temporarily blocked the state from enforcing the law while the lawsuit progresses. 

Arkansas’ Attorney General asked the Eighth Circuit to lift his order so that the state can start enforcing the law right away. Earlier this summer a three-judge panel heard arguments in that case.

Evidence is mounting that puberty blockers, cross-sex hormones, and sex-change procedures are dangerous for children.

With that in mind, we believe our federal court system ultimately will uphold the SAFE Act and let Arkansas protect these children.

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