AP/ October 2, 2012, 8:06 PM

Christian group files suit to stop gay therapy ban

SAN FRANCISCO A Christian legal group has filed a lawsuit to overturn a first-of-its-kind California law that prohibits licensed mental health professionals from practicing therapies aimed at making gay and lesbian teenagers straight.

The California-based Pacific Justice Institute challenged the law signed Saturday by Gov. Jerry Brown. The lawsuit was filed late Monday in U.S. District Court in Sacramento.

The institute filed the suit on behalf of a psychiatrist and a marriage and family therapist who is also a church pastor in San Diego. It also names as a plaintiff Aaron Bitzer, a Culver City man who says he has benefited from the "reparative" therapy.

The lawsuit claims the law, which is scheduled to take effect Jan. 1, violates First Amendment and equal protection rights.

Meanwhile, gay rights advocates are making plans to get other states to join California in banning such therapies.

Brown called the therapies "quackery" that "have no basis in science or medicine."

Two New Jersey lawmakers already are drafting similar legislation, while groups that helped get the California law passed are sharing research, witnesses and talking points with counterparts in other gay-friendly states, said Geoff Kors, senior legislative and policy strategist for the San Francisco-based National Center for Lesbian Rights.

"There are lots of folks today who are looking at this, now that the governor has signed it," Kors said. "We'll be reaching out to all the state (gay rights) groups, especially in states that have had success passing LGBT rights legislation."

The law only applies to licensed therapists, not ministers or lay people who counsel teens to resist same-sex attractions.

It states that mental health providers who use sexual orientation change efforts on clients under 18 would be engaging in unprofessional conduct and subject to discipline by their respective state licensing boards.

Mainstream associations representing psychiatrists, psychologists and social workers have dismissed reparative therapy in recent decades as being ineffective and potentially dangerous to the mental health of teenagers and young adults who are led to believe their interest in same-sex partners is wrong.

As originally written, the bill introduced by state Sen. Ted Lieu, D-Torrance, also would have required therapists to warn adult patients of the practice's risks and limitations and to obtain their written consent before engaging in it.

Lieu dropped the informed consent provision, however, after a number of mental health associations in California — including the California Psychological Association and the California Association of Marriage and Family Therapists — complained that it interfered with the therapist-client relationship.

Both groups, as well as the other leading professional groups, ultimately endorsed the ban for juveniles.

It remained unclear how many practitioners and patients the law would affect.

David Pruden, vice president of the California-based National Association for Research and Therapy on Homosexuality, a professional association that supports treatment for homosexuality, estimated there are two dozen therapists statewide who engage in efforts to change sexual orientation, and not all of them treat adolescents.

© 2012 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
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Reality_Chex says:
I want to see therapists establish religious delusion conversion that will rid religious people of the confusion, feelings of guilt, violence, and stress from being Christian and help transform them from being a Theist to becoming an A Theist (non-theist).
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rightontarget says:
Jack_25 replies: So you don't support a therapy that can help young people?

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"help young people" to do what?? Conform to their parent's and society's idea of what is "acceptibale" in what should be a very private matter? Be brainwashed into a belief that there is something wrong with them that needs "fixed"? (Yeah, well who gets to make that decision for them?) Maybe this "therapy" can help them to commit suicide??? Yeah, that's "helpful" alright.

Most of these "young people" get forced into this quackery by parents who are ashamed of them or religious fanatics. Real "therapy" would "help" if it could help the "young person" figure out for themselves what their actual sexual orientation is. Being a "young person" can be confusing enough without bias opinions trying to force you to be something against your will. For a genuine gay young person this type of "therapy" boils down to just plain abuse.
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PacificJusticeInstitute says:
Pacific Justice Institute (http://www.pji.org) recommends that you read the law in its entirety and see how it legally infringes upon your rights.
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lloydbest1 says:
Gender preference is hardwired.

There are no sociological triggers, nor is there an environmental one that anybody has come up with that explains the persistance of a lifestyle that would seem to be counterproductive to continuance of the species. For some reason, a small but significant percentage of people come out of the chute ALREADY predisposed to preference of their own gender. Nothing the parent, the diet, the neighbors, the school system or any other external factor has anything to do the emergence of homosexual traits.

This is not something that any kind of therapy, talk or otherwise, can alter. If you are gay, you just simply have to live with it. If you are not gay, then the best thing you can do is accept the "alternative lifestyle" as morally neutral.

Any attempts to "treat" or "cure" homosexuality is just so much wishful thinking and quakery. I think the ban on such woo-woo is wise and just. Do not try to fix something that isn't broken.

And I just have to add this: to 88Ronin, it's not religion as such (any more than homosexuality) that poisons everything, it is religious EXTREMISM that is the toxin......
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rightontarget says:
Jack_25 replies: "Where do you get hate from?This is about a treatment that could end up being a major breakthrough in curing the mental disorder known as homosexuality!California is trying to keep people from being helped!"
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"mental disorder"???? Really??????? LMAO!!!! You are so full of it!
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suesark says:
They would call themselves Christians. Shame on them.
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D-Waarheid says:
Train up a child in the way he should go: and when he is old, he will not depart from it.
Book of wisdom Proverbs 22:6
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avgctzn50 says:
So what if someone does not want to be gay any more and is seeking help or if someone wants to be gay and is seeking help? I think we should be careful of what we ban.
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rwsmith29456 says:
This is a 'group' that describes themselves as Christian. Many Christians feel that this type of 'therapy' or mindset is ridiculous. Please don't put everybody in the same pot.
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suesark replies:
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88Ronin: No, I do consider myself to be a Christian but I sure as heck don't support this "therapy". I happen to believe that we are all God's children...and God doesn't make junk.
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Jhihmoac says:
With all the hype on the minsters/priests caught up in the nasty stuff they're doing, the Christians ought to back out of this one...
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raflin1 replies:
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But as long as a priest abuses a child, it's fine with these types of "Christians." Why are so called "Christians" uspet about that issue???
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