Breakpoint

The Supreme Court Strikes Down Colorado's Counseling Law, A Tragic Assisted Suicide in Spain, Easter and Christian Morality, and the NBA's Speech Police

17 snips
Apr 3, 2026
They unpack the Supreme Court ruling on Colorado’s counseling law and its free-speech consequences. A heartbreaking assisted‑suicide case in Spain raises questions about autonomy and vulnerable people. They debate Easter, the resurrection, and how Christian morality connects to miracles. A controversy over an NBA player’s faith and team discipline sparks a discussion on speech and professional consequences.
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INSIGHT

Supreme Court Protects Counselor Speech

  • The Supreme Court struck down Colorado's conversion-therapy ban as compelled professional speech, protecting counselors like Casey Childs from state-mandated affirmation of transgender or gay identities.
  • John Stonestreet highlights the 8–1 decision, ADF's 3–0 Supreme Court wins, and concerns about states overreaching into therapeutic speech.
INSIGHT

Ideology Overtook Evidence In Gender Medicine

  • Medical and counseling practices raced ahead of evidence on sexual orientation and gender identity, producing laws and guidance that often lacked scientific consensus.
  • Stonestreet argues for more science and scrutiny, not coercive policing of medicine as Justice Jackson advocated in dissent.
ANECDOTE

Tragic Assisted Dying Case In Spain

  • Maria Baer recounts a Spanish case where a young woman paralyzed after a suicide attempt was granted assisted dying despite her father's legal fight, and she was killed.
  • They use this tragedy to warn that autonomy-focused policies enable harms and normalize killing the vulnerable.
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