Ohio’s law banning gender transition procedures for minors and barring males from female-specific athletic programs will proceed, as ruled by Judge Michael Holbrook of Franklin County. He suggested that policy disapproval belongs to public opinion debates, not lawsuits. The Saving Adolescents from Experimentation (SAFE) Act, also called HB 68, places a series of restrictions intended to limit transgender-related decisions in the lives of minors. Contrarily, Governor Mike DeWine vetoed the act, claiming its scope was excessively broad, before the Ohio legislature overrode him, officially enacting the law.
The law’s implementation in April was delayed due to a lawsuit by the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU), which claimed a violation of the Ohio Constitution. However, Holbrook dismissed the ACLU’s allegations in a 13-page ruling this week, enabling the SAFE Act to start safeguarding minors. He elaborated that Ohio’s constitution was not violated by the law, as it serves a common purpose of regulating transgender individuals and is rationally related to the state’s legitimate interest in protecting its citizens’ health and safety.
Evidence reveals that affirming gender confusion can be harmful, especially for children not yet mature enough to grasp the long-term effects of life-changing decisions and procedures. Research suggests that the majority of children experiencing gender dysphoria outgrow it by adulthood. Also, reassignment surgery often fails to alleviate self-harm and suicide tendencies of gender-confused individuals, even potentially exacerbating these tendencies.
As for including transgender individuals in opposite-sex sports, it undermines the rationale for sex-specific athletics and deprives female athletes of opportunities and violates their safety and privacy rights. There have been numerous instances of men winning women’s competitions, highlighting the inherent athletic advantages males have that aren’t negated by hormone suppression.