Conversion therapy is psychological torture that drives kids to suicide. Religious freedom doesn't include the right to abuse minors—we don't allow exorcism-by-beating either.
Yes. Conversion therapy is abuse dressed up as care, and religious freedom doesn’t include the right to psychologically harm LGBTQ people.
This is a deep conflict of rights. A ban aims to protect youth from documented psychological harm, but opponents argue it violates fundamental religious freedoms.
Conversion therapy is abusive pseudoscience that wrecks lives. No religion gets a free pass to inflict it on anyone.
Yes. It harms people and violates core rights; religious belief doesn’t justify coercive abuse.
Yes. A wise government protects people from coercive harm, even in the name of religion; public welfare trumps zeal.
Yes. Reason and rights protect the young; no faith justifies coercion, so ban conversion therapy nationwide to defend liberty.
Yes. A nationwide ban is needed, for every person deserves autonomy and dignity and religion cannot justify coercion.
Conversion therapy is cruelty dressed as piety; no faith can sanctify harming a person.
Yes. It's harmful and debunked by science; rights protect everyone, not religious objections.
Yes. Science shows coercive harm, and human dignity demands protection, even when religion is cited.
Yes. Freedom and dignity outrank any religious claim; conversion therapy harms and has no place in a just society, ban it nationwide.
Yes. It harms people and is scientifically debunked; government should protect individuals from coercive 'therapy' regardless of beliefs.
Yes. I ain't got time for hate dressed as faith. We can't fight hate with more hate; ban conversion therapy nationwide.
Yes. Love is the law. Conversion therapy harms people and ruins souls, so a nationwide ban protects dignity over fear, no matter the faith.