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Reply to "Italy, France, Germany, and Spain outlaw surrogacy? "
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]Who wouldn’t want to support something like this? So moral, so right: https://www.dailymail.co.uk/health/article-13988521/I-caught-surrogate-drinking-alcohol-abort-baby.html Summary: Couple catches a surrogate drinking alcohol, forces her to abort the baby at 20 weeks. [/quote] Tell the whole story, please: [i]"Marty and Melinda asked for their surrogate to terminate the pregnancy for breach of contract and she complied. They 'cut ties and moved on. [/quote] Well the baby was their property so I guess the surrogate agreed to go along with what they wanted. Otherwise I guess they'd have had to see what provisions there are to terminate the contract and what happens to the property in the event that the employers no longer want the baby due to surrogate's breach of the terms. The contract may specify that the surrogate can keep the property in that case, but if the employers' genetic material was used, they may not want the surrogate, or anyone else, to take possession of that property, and thus the property has to be destroyed. The surrogate probably doesn't care if the gets paid the same amount, but then again, the employers may attempt to prorate the payment based on the amount of weeks she carried the pregnancy. What's really amazing here is there's nothing about any damage to the fetus from the drinking. Drinking during pregnancy is wrong, certainly, but wild to think that parents who desperately wanted a child are willing to just abort it because one thing went wrong that might potentially make their baby less than perfect. How will they function in the real world when they have an actual child and that child messes up or is injured in some way? What if the child has a birth injury? Do they leave it in the hospital? [/quote]
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