Washington — The Supreme Court on Tuesday ruled in favor of a Colorado counselor who challenged a state law that bans “conversion therapy” for minors, ruling that lower courts failed to apply “sufficiently rigorous First Amendment scrutiny” in the case.
The high court ruled 8-1 that Colorado’s law, when applied to talk therapy provided by counselor Kaley Chiles, regulates speech based on viewpoint. Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson was the lone dissenter.
The Supreme Court reversed a decision from the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 10th Circuit that found the law did not violate Chiles’ free-speech rights. The appeals court instead concluded that it regulates professional conduct and only incidentally burdens speech.
In a stunning 8-1 decision, the Supreme Court has rocked the nation by siding with Colorado counselor Kaley Chiles, slamming the state’s ban on conversion therapy for minors as unconstitutional censorship of speech! The justices blasted lower courts for failing to protect free speech vigorously enough, declaring Colorado's law a dangerous overreach that punishes therapists for their viewpoint, not just conduct. Justice Neil Gorsuch’s scathing majority opinion warns that no government should impose ideological orthodoxy, even in the name of public health—leaving the fate of similar bans in limbo and setting the stage for fierce battles over the limits of expression and LGBTQ+ protections nationwide. The lone dissenter, Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson, signals this issue is far from settled as the courts grapple with where free speech ends and harmful practice begins.
📰 Via Cbsnews
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