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Parent A and Parent B - and baby makes C? (or Thing-One and Thing-Two make Thing-Three)
Townhall ^
| July 29, 2005
| Kathleen Parker
Posted on 07/29/2005 9:47:45 AM PDT by HawaiianGecko
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To: HawaiianGecko
"Thing" is used here neither dismissively nor derisively, but as a term of stunning accuracy. Throughout our culture, children have become objectified, "thingified," created or acquired for the fulfillment of our selves - decor options, accessories, cute little bundles for our entertainment and amusement.
Precisely.
21
posted on
07/29/2005 10:49:10 AM PDT
by
shezza
(God Bless Our Troops)
To: CharlesWayneCT
If you want to keep it secret, have a "for public use" record which has what the parents want. But lets make sure the OFFICIAL DOCUMENTS tell the truth. Both the new birth certificate and the original birth certificate are official documents- in most states, the original is sealed after adoption, and depending on state law a child may or may not have a right to see it as an adult. In many states, you cannot ever see your original birth certicates without a court order and/or consent from your birth parents.
22
posted on
07/29/2005 10:49:35 AM PDT
by
LWalk18
To: HawaiianGecko
Now with technology, sperm donors and "uterobots" - women willing to sell or give away the flesh of their flesh - any random collection of human beings can "parent."
I'd take an exception to author's implications and use of term "uterobots" here. Said women are providing a service; no more, no less. And while the morality of providing such services may be questioned (like prostitution), casting sly comparisons with slavery is dishonest. Also, it would be quite dishonest to mark such mere "rent-a-womb" or "egg donor" as a mother, especially if she didn't provide the egg...
23
posted on
07/29/2005 10:50:06 AM PDT
by
MirrorField
(Just an opinion from atheist, minarchist and small-l libertarian.)
To: kx9088
24
posted on
07/29/2005 10:51:15 AM PDT
by
HawaiianGecko
(Doing the same thing over and over again, expecting different results is the definition of insanity.)
To: HawaiianGecko
Woman. Man. Marriage. One flesh. Baby.
As George Orwell said, "We have now sunk to a depth at which restatement of the obvious is the first duty of intelligent men."
Or as G.K. Chesterton said, "The act of defending any of the cardinal virtues has today all the exhilaration of a vice."
25
posted on
07/29/2005 10:55:11 AM PDT
by
Mrs. Don-o
(Veritatis Splendor.)
To: Mrs. Don-o
26
posted on
07/29/2005 10:58:46 AM PDT
by
HawaiianGecko
(Doing the same thing over and over again, expecting different results is the definition of insanity.)
To: MirrorField
The word robota (and its derivatives) occurs in the Czech, Polish, Russian, and - as I recollect - Ukrainian languages (in Russian it transliterates as rabota) and has the same meaning in each: work; and robotnik means worker.
Thus a "uterobot" is a "womb-worker." That's straightforward enough. If it seems to have a negative connotation, it may be because we sense there's something wrong with the objectification, reification, "thingification" of babies and mothers, whose personal relationship with each other --- like the personal relationship of lovers --- ought not to be reduced to a laboratory procedure or a commercial transaction.
27
posted on
07/29/2005 11:11:25 AM PDT
by
Mrs. Don-o
(Veritatis Splendor.)
To: conservative cat
I think it may vary from state to state, and of course laws change over time. Assuming that all or most states now retain some form of original biological parentage record to the extent that the information was available, it's still not the person's official birth certificate, once it's been replaced with the "legal parents" edition. And I believe that at least most states don't put anything on the new one to indicate that it's not the biological parents who are listed, and that if an adopted child isn't told that s/he is adopted, there's no way for him/her to tell from the official birth certificate.
To: Mrs. Don-o
You may note that we don't speak Russian or Polish here. The problem with "uterobot" is that it straightforwardly and incorrectly compares "rent-a-womb" worker with robot or android.
Those practices are questionable as themselves without incorrect vilification which can only weaken one's argument.
Note that I am not commenting on arguments themselves, for or against. Just nitpicking semantics...
29
posted on
07/31/2005 8:02:48 AM PDT
by
MirrorField
(Just an opinion from atheist, minarchist and small-l libertarian.)
To: MirrorField
A fellow nitpicker! Thank you. :o)
Hmm. How about "uteropreneur"?
30
posted on
07/31/2005 9:43:26 AM PDT
by
Mrs. Don-o
(As always, striving for accuracy.)
To: Mrs. Don-o
Maybe. I do note that "gestational carrier" is wikipedia definition for such person and that the article notes that surrogacy is "not yet well defined". It is quite possible that this technology is so new that generally-agreed terminology for various participants and other parts do not yet exist... Which could give ...propagandally inclined... people opportunity to frame the debate on their own terms.
ObMyOpinion: Parents are what counts. Biological parentage is of far, far less importance. And if kids' guardian(s) are responsible and up to the task, I would approve parenting by AI, uplifted dolphins, space aliens or even gay couples. Unless positively proven incapable or unsuitable for the job of course, for example by being connected to kiddie molesting or such, but that's a job for CPS.
31
posted on
08/01/2005 12:20:45 PM PDT
by
MirrorField
(Just an opinion from atheist, minarchist and small-l libertarian.)
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