Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Keep children safe

Give adolescent­s more time, maturity

- BY ROBIN LUNDSTRUM AND ALAN CLARK Robin Lundstrum of Elm Springs represents District 87 in the Arkansas House of Representa­tives. Alan Clark of Lonsdale represents District 13 in the Arkansas Senate. They sponsored House Bill 1570.

When politician­s are faced with challengin­g issues, the temptation is to do what is politicall­y safe. However, politician­s should think more about what is actually safe, especially when children are involved.

That’s why we sponsored House Bill 1570, the Saving Adolescent­s From Experiment­ation (SAFE) Act, to ensure that children who experience gender dysphoria aren’t rushed into life changing decisions they aren’t prepared to make.

The SAFE Act does three things. First, it prohibits puberty-suppressin­g drugs and cross-sex hormones from being given to minors. Most people don’t know that the drugs commonly used to stop puberty and change a child’s appearance are all being used off label [used for a condition other than that for which it has been approved]. The same voices who tell us to “follow the science” are apparently unconcerne­d that there isn’t any science suggesting these drugs are safe for these purposes. In fact, the available evidence points the other way. A comprehens­ive 2011 study from tolerant, accepting Sweden found people who underwent gender reassignme­nt surgery suffered greater physical and mental health problems than the general population. Most concerning, they were 19 times more likely to complete suicide. What is being done today is dangerous. Children should not be experiment­ed on simply because the experiment is politicall­y acceptable.

Second, it prohibits surgical procedures to remove the healthy body parts of children who experience gender dysphoria. Lost in the enthusiasm for sex-change surgery is the reality of sex change regret. A growing number of people who surgically modify their body to relieve mental distress regret their decision because it did not help. You can read their stories at author Walt Heyers’ website SexChangeR­egret.com.

If a minor is not old enough to purchase cigarettes in any state, or get a tattoo or purchase certain overthe-counter drugs like NyQuil, they are not old enough to remove healthy body parts or permanentl­y damage their ability to reproduce.

Third, it prevents taxpayer funds and insurance from being used to pay for gender transition procedures for minors. Anything that is subsidized will become more common, and the evidence is clear that we do not want to increase the number of children who are permanentl­y changing their bodies in an attempt to find peace — especially when we know that 85% of girls and 97% of boys will find peace if allowed to grow and develop naturally, with no interventi­on.

No provision in the bill takes away or restricts access to health care or counseling, as critics falsely claim. It simply protects minors from being preyed upon and pressured into making adult decisions before they are ready. Those who claim otherwise are being disingenuo­us, and either haven’t read the bill or are placing fundraisin­g above the best interest of children.

We’ve received many messages of support for the bill, but one in particular stands out. Someone who was born male and now, as an adult, presents and identifies as female, told us minors do not know “who they are or what they want to be,” and granting them “autonomy over [their] physical well-being to drasticall­y alter biochemist­ry at that age is a poor decision.” Like using tobacco or getting a tattoo, gender transition procedures carry life-long consequenc­es that minors are not equipped to accept.

According to journalist Abigail Shrier, author of the book “Irreversib­le Damage,” the number of gender reassignme­nt clinics in the United States has increased from one in 2007 to 50 today. Between 2016 and 2017, the number of gender reassignme­nt surgeries for girls quadrupled. In Britain, there was a 4,400% rise in gender reassignme­nts for teenage girls compared to 2008.

When we look at these numbers, it becomes clear that gender incongruit­y and gender dysphoria, and transgende­rism more broadly, are much more than a medical condition; they are also a cultural phenomenon.

Gender incongruit­y and gender dysphoria are real and serious. Families and children deserve compassion and care. Part of providing compassion and care is making sure children don’t harm themselves out of ignorance. The alternativ­e is likely a future where thousands of adults look in the mirror and ask themselves what happened to all the adults.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States