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Liberty Counsel files suit today challenging California ban on gay conversion therapy

By   /   October 4, 2012  /   No Comments

SACRAMENTO, Calif. (WordNews.org) Oct. 4, 2012 – As promised, Liberty Counsel has filed a lawsuit in federal court challenging California’s the new law that bans any counseling to diminish, eliminate, or manage same-sex sexual attractions.
Liberty Counsel represents several parents and their children who are receiving and benefiting from such counseling, several licensed counselors, the National Association for Research and Therapy of Homosexuality (NARTH), and the American Association for Christian Counselors (AACC), an organization with about 50,000 professional counseling members.
“This law places the state between the client and the counselor,” said Mat Staver, founder and chairman of Liberty Counsel. “This law intrudes on a client’s fundamental right of self-determination to seek counseling that aligns with his/her religious and moral values. This law forces counselors to overrule the will of their clients who choose to prioritize their religious or moral values above unwanted same-sex sexual attraction.”

To see the filing

Staver said the law forces clients to receive and counselors to provide only one viewpoint on the subject of same-sex attractions, even when the client does not want to act on those attractions.
This law even forbids counselors from referring clients to someone of their choice. For the state to assume that it knows best what kind of counseling individuals should receive is the height of hubris and ignorance, Staver said.
The law defines “sexual orientation change efforts” as any practice that is designed to reduce or eliminate same-sex attraction. Such broad language will prohibit any counseling that does not affirm and encourage experimentation with or acceptance of same-sex attractions, regardless of whether those feelings and attractions are unwanted by the counselee.
“This law is an astounding violation of the right to free speech and religious liberty. Clients have the right to receive information that aligns with their values, and counselors have the right and the duty to provide information to help the clients in pursuit of their right to self-determination,” Staver said.

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  • Published: 12 years ago on October 4, 2012
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  • Last Modified: October 8, 2012 @ 8:32 am
  • Filed Under: Featured, Law

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