Rep. Eric Sorensen ( D., Illinois ) applauds an LGBT clinic in his district for raising money to give minors sex change drugs, and praises the nonprofit for providing crucial “health care” that makes his district” thrive.”
Yet as transgender solutions for minors have received increasing scrutiny from medical specialists across the United States and around the world, Sorensen has strongly defended them. Sorensen recently traveled to the Project of the Quad Cities to promote the organization’s efforts to treat transgender children who are biologically transitioning.
The doctor, where Sorensen formerly served as a table member, says puberty blockers and mix- sex hormones are “lifesaving” and “essential” to the health and properly- being of minors who identify as transgender. The volunteer doctor began looking for donations in July 2023 to start providing sex change medications to children.
Andy Rowe, the patient’s director of health treatment operations, told PBS in January that despite having some obstacles in the process, the program has the necessary staff and almost sufficient funding to launch and operate the system.
After visiting the office last month, Sorensen remarked on social media that” The Project of the Quad Cities is a companion in helping our LGBTQ+ companions in #IL17 thrive.” In remarks to the Quad-City Times, he continued,” I was able to know what the requirements were in the Quad-Cities and see the services that The Project provides.”
As health professionals both in the United States and worldwide issue warnings about the dangers of clinically transitioning trans minors, Sorensen’s reward for the center comes as they are concerned about the risks of the center.
In July 2022, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration issued a caution for gonadotropin-releasing hormone agonists, which are frequently sold off-label as puberty blockers, citing health risks like brain swelling among young people taking them. According to studies, these medications also pose a danger of fertility.
Early this month, the National Health Service of England updated policy guidance that states that those under 18 can only get puberty-suppressing hormone if they are enrolled in a clinical study test. The NHS pointed out that there is n’t enough evidence to support such treatments ‘ safety or effectiveness. Over two hundred states have passed laws in the United States that forbid the sale of these medications to minors.
Sorensen did not respond to comments on the request for comment.
During his attend, Sorensen, a undergraduate Democrat in the 17th Congressional District of Illinois, highlighted the need to support areas like the Project of the Quad Cities, according to local media in Rock Island, Illinois. Sorensen previously worked on the board of directors at both the Project of the Quad Cities and Clock, Inc., a team the Project refers patients to for” neck binders”, “voice lessons”, and workshops on “youth bring king &, wife engagement”.
The patient’s place near the Illinois boundary, Sorensen says, is an advantage for juveniles who believe they’re trans.
He stated during his March 25 attend to the Project that “you may cross the border into the state of Illinois and get the health care you need.” The doctor describes itself as a “haven along the Mississippi,” surrounded by other Western states where transgender students ‘ “right to lifesaving treatment has been abrogated.” According to Rasmussen, people “must understand that the knowledge of a baby as they grow into an adult does n’t occur at this random 18-year mark,” according to Sorensen on C- SPAN last season. It happens as a lad”.
The Project currently offers a number of female transition-related services to children as young as 12 while awaiting the funding to give puberty blockers and cross-sex hormones to minors. These include free counseling and education for trans and queer youth on issues like as” Deconstructing Gender”, proper noun usage,  ,” the principles of LGBTQ Vocabulary”, and protected sex and drug use.
A” Gender Spectrum Support Group,” one of the counseling services offered to children as young as 12 years old, aims to discuss, among other things, intimate relationships in which its youth patients may be engaged. The Project’s website also includes a” Safer Sex Guide” resource that is intended for “everyone—no matter your age” and covers topics like how to safely use drugs during sex and what to do if blood is present during sexual activity. It also details various sexual fetishes, including “golden showers”, “fisting”, and” shit play”.
The Project’s lead clinician and case manager, Clyde A. Lipp, was arrested in 2013 during a public indecency sting after reportedly attempting to solicit an undercover officer for sex in Blackhawk Springs East Forest Preserve, located in Rockford, Illinois. Lipp reportedly took a leave of absence while he was facing a battery charge brought on by the sting at the time because he had been the long-time director of family services at Sinnissippi Centers in Dixon. The outcome of the case is unknown, and Lipp did not respond to requests for comment.
According to Lipp’s bio on the Project of the Quad Cities’s website, Lipp works” with children, adolescents and adults impacted by depression, anxiety, relationship issues, divorce, trauma, HIV, gender issues, attachment, and LGBT- QIA issues”.
Sorensen, who is part of the LGBTQ+ Victory Fund, recently said he has no regrets about hosting drag shows for kids during his time with the Project and Clock, Inc., after spending years promoting them as a board director.
In the November election for Illinois ‘ 17th Congressional District, the Illinois Democrat will face Republican newcomer and former circuit court judge Joe McGraw, who frequently insults the intelligence of his constituents.