Huffington Magazine Issue 57 | Page 45

HUFFINGTON 07.14.13 AP PHOTO/ALAN MARLER STRAIGHT TALK to outlaw licensed therapists from attempting to change the sexual orientation of minors. “These practices have no basis in science or medicine, and they will now be relegated to the dustbin of quackery,” Gov. Jerry Brown of California said upon signing the bill into the law. It’s unclear whether that law and similar bills proposed in New York, New Jersey and Massachusetts will survive an expected barrage of legal challenges. Late last year, two conservative legal groups filed suits claiming that the California ban amounted to an unconstitutional violation of parental rights, privacy and freedom of speech. Both cases are awaiting ruling at the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals. Legal experts say they expect the litigation process to drag on for years. Culture warriors on both sides have rallied around these cases, portraying them as fundamental to the future of gay rights on the one hand and religious freedom on the other. Central to the dispute is the question of whether sexual orientation can be changed through counseling (or prayer). Social conservatives have long argued that homosexuality is a chosen “lifestyle” — as Newt Gingrich put it to The Des Moines Register when he was running for president in 2011, “people have many ranges of choices.” Although these views are increasingly marginal, gay-rights activists still feel that they threaten to undermine the central premise of the modern gay rights movement — that sexuality is as immutable as skin color, and that gay people should be granted the same rights and protections as any other minority group. Wayne Besen, founder of Truth Wins Out, an organization dedicated to fighting conversion therapy, said the idea that people choose to be gay “is the foundation itself of homophobia. People in the movement get upset and say it shouldn’t matter whether someone chooses homo- Alan Chambers, who once claimed he “overcame unwanted same-sex attraction,” was the president of Exodus International, an ex-gay Christian organization. Chambers later apologized and shut down operations at the organization last month.