What do you mean, the right to know their relatives? Knowing is a two-way street. Knowing they exist, OK. But if I don't want to know someone, you can't make me . |
I'd worry about your incomprehensible word salad, rather than my punctuation and grammar. |
I think there should be some way to contact a neutral 3rd party and they reach out to the other side. if the feeling is mutual and both want to know about the other, then information is shared.
You get into tricky situations that are tricky when extended family is found but maybe not the birth mother or father. I do feel that men and women have a right for their medical information to remain private and the lats i looked a pregnancy was a medical condition. While i feel for the children who want to know where they came from, they have to respect that the mother/father chose not to have them in their life for a reason. Maybe financial, medical, situational, whatever. I don't think anyone has a right to know their biological family. Don't they get some background/medical information from the adoption agency about their biological parents? I know my cousin did (well my aunt/uncle did when they adopted her) they found out the bio mom was addicted to cocain, had diabetes and the dad's family had a history of alcoholism among other things. My cousin knows that medical history but does not know the people themselves (because it was a closed adoption) |
How shitty to take away yet another basic human right as a woman. First limit her right to contraception, then make abortions all but impossible to get, and advocate "adoption!!!!" but if she chooses that she still has to have her life ripped apart in a few years time.
When does a woman (or man) get to have their choices respected and upheld? A CLOSED adoption is that. CLOSED. DO NOT CONTACT. |
OP here.
I don't know if this situation has brought my sister peace or more questions. But since I wrote my post, she's found everyone including birth father and it's not a happy story regarding any of them. Surprisingly my sister looks more like my family than any of them. But this thread has made me anti adoption. |
Are you willing to tell us something about the family background and birth circumstances? I’m not surprised that your sister would look more like you family. If the birth family were of a certain socioeconomic background with its cultural behaviors and your sister grew up much more comfortably off in a happier family life, her having completely different diets, attitudes and body languages will make her appear physically closer to your parents than her birth parents. |
That exists in some states. It's called a confidential intermediary. |
Really? Because your sister had a bad experience, you are now anti-adoption? It’s like saying a woman dies from an abortion and now you’re anti-abortion. People who are adopted usually have unhappy stories surrounding their existence. That’s why they were placed for adoption. No one is perfectly happy with a perfect life and puts their kid up for adoption. There is a reason why. I am sorry it has gone badly for your sister. She needs counseling to deal with the aftermath. Btw, I’m an adoptee and I am in reunion with my birth family, so I speak from experience with the good, the bad, and the ugly. |
Who wouldn't be anti-adoption knowing that the rights/privacy of the mother cannot be protected anymore.
Who knows what the next advancement will be in technology, you can already track down who you want via DNA or at least find family. IF someone wants an open adoption i doubt their minds will change, however, if someone wants a closed one? That is literally nonexistent at this point. Yeah, for a short period of time until the kid can google and swab their own mouth. Many times adoption is not an easy decision the way it is and the mother usually either struggles her whole life or moves on and builds a new one. Either way, there is likely little chance she wants to be found 18 years later and be 'mom' to someone who she chose not to have in her life to begin with. i am interested in how adoptive parents feel about all of this. Before the child usually had no avenue to find the birth family so they only had the adoptive one. Now, their child will likely know and be able to find their bio family. What does that do to the adoptive one? |
You’re so missing the point. A woman losing her life to abortion (which is exceedingly rare, when access to medical abortion is available) is not the norm. Adopted or not... do you think most people actually have an easy family life? Unhappy surroundings are the standard for a lot of people. Being adopted doesn’t hold the standard on this. |
Honestly, with the expansion and popularity of these DNA testing kits, there really is no such thing as a closed adoption anymore.
THAT should scare pro-lifers as it will lead to more abortions, IMO. |
Yes, many people have difficult family and personal lives but adoption ads another layer to it that you are missing. |
Until you’re not adopted, and have no more excuses in your life. Run your life as yours. Seriously. |
Yes. Happy now? |
NP You are talking about different spheres of information. And adopted person should not be made to keep their birth a secret. They should not have to keep the fact that they were adopted a secret. But whether a specified, particular woman gave birth to a child is information that belongs to that woman. I'd argue that similarly, whether a given child was born to a particular family is their information, not the family's. So if it got down to it, for example, if your father was a mass murderer, you should have privacy and control over the fact you -- an identified person -- were born to him. The family shouldn't be able to "out" you if you have chosen not to reveal that information. |