Clarence Thomas rails against 'self-described experts' as 'irrelevant' while justices uphold ban on medical care for transgender minors

Clarence Thomas.

Justice Clarence Thomas during a 2018 legal discussion (YouTube/Library of Congress).

As the U.S. Supreme Court”s conservative majority ruled 6-3 on Wednesday in favor of upholding Tennessee’s ban on certain medical care for transgender minors, Justice Clarence Thomas penned a concurrence slamming “self-described experts” as “irrelevant” and urging judicial restraint should other state legislatures follow in the footsteps of the Volunteer State.

In U.S. v. Skrmetti, the majority led by Chief Justice John Roberts held that the state’s law, SB1, “prohibiting certain medical treatments for transgender minors is not subject to heightened scrutiny under the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment and satisfies rational basis review,” a decisive loss for three transgender teenagers and their parents who challenged prohibitions on puberty blockers and hormone therapy.

The high court declined to say that the law discriminates based on sex in light of Justice Neil Gorsuch’s 2020 opinion in Bostock v. Clayton County.

“We have not yet considered whether Bostock’s reasoning reaches beyond the Title VII context, and we need not do so here. For reasons we have already explained, changing a minor’s sex or transgender status does not alter the application of SB1,” Roberts wrote for the majority.

Thomas’s concurrence began by supporting the majority’s but was mainly written to “address some additional arguments made in defense of Tennessee’s law.”

Among those “additional arguments” was Thomas’ panning of “self-described experts” as “irrelevant,” his criticism of the term “gender-affirming care,” and his skepticism of “medical consensus.”

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