Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This thread is incredibly sad to me and not because of the child but because of the responses from grown adult woman who breed. I'm saddened. What is deemed as an "unacceptable life" to many of you ladies. I have a friend born without arms and they lead a very happy and fulfilled life, great job, loves and volunteers with handicap dogs and animals. They want to be here and are thrilled their mother didn't abort them.
I'm sad for humanity.
Any life that I don’t want to bring into the world. I’m not a breeder, no matter what you say, and I am not obligated to host anything I don’t want to inside my body.
Having no legs AND no arms is much different than just no arms, btw.
Ok so no legs but arms ok?
Or
No arms but legs ok?
Or
One arm one leg ok?
How many limbs does your kid require?
At this time in my life I would terminate all of the above.
Lazy eye?
Blind?
Very short?
Anonymous wrote:I’m generally pro-life, but in a situation like this where the child would invariably face a life of extreme hardship, I would abort.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This thread is incredibly sad to me and not because of the child but because of the responses from grown adult woman who breed. I'm saddened. What is deemed as an "unacceptable life" to many of you ladies. I have a friend born without arms and they lead a very happy and fulfilled life, great job, loves and volunteers with handicap dogs and animals. They want to be here and are thrilled their mother didn't abort them.
I'm sad for humanity.
Any life that I don’t want to bring into the world. I’m not a breeder, no matter what you say, and I am not obligated to host anything I don’t want to inside my body.
Having no legs AND no arms is much different than just no arms, btw.
Ok so no legs but arms ok?
Or
No arms but legs ok?
Or
One arm one leg ok?
How many limbs does your kid require?
At this time in my life I would terminate all of the above.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This piece was in the Daily Mail yesterday, very relevant to this thread conversation and contains thought provoking questions. It’s about a dad and disabled son in the UK, but as a caregiver in the USA I can attest that the problems described in the article are as bad or much worse in most of the USA. Disabled people face lives of uncertainty and exploitation/abuse if they are not independently wealthy and if they don’t have excellent guardians protecting their fiscal and medical best interests.
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/health/article-11713065/BBCs-Humphrey-Hawksley-admits-keeping-disabled-autistic-son-Christopher-alive-wrong.html
BBC journalist Humphrey Hawksley poignantly admits keeping his severely disabled and autistic son Christopher, now 26, alive might have been the wrong thing to do - 20 years after writing despairingly of the dearth of help for his boy
That's hard to read. But it's the reality. And it's why I won't visit judgment on anyone faced with this sort of hard decision.
Anonymous wrote:I don't think anyone can answer with 100% certainty what they'd do until they were faced with the reality of having to decide.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This piece was in the Daily Mail yesterday, very relevant to this thread conversation and contains thought provoking questions. It’s about a dad and disabled son in the UK, but as a caregiver in the USA I can attest that the problems described in the article are as bad or much worse in most of the USA. Disabled people face lives of uncertainty and exploitation/abuse if they are not independently wealthy and if they don’t have excellent guardians protecting their fiscal and medical best interests.
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/health/article-11713065/BBCs-Humphrey-Hawksley-admits-keeping-disabled-autistic-son-Christopher-alive-wrong.html
BBC journalist Humphrey Hawksley poignantly admits keeping his severely disabled and autistic son Christopher, now 26, alive might have been the wrong thing to do - 20 years after writing despairingly of the dearth of help for his boy
That's hard to read. But it's the reality. And it's why I won't visit judgment on anyone faced with this sort of hard decision.
Anonymous wrote:This piece was in the Daily Mail yesterday, very relevant to this thread conversation and contains thought provoking questions. It’s about a dad and disabled son in the UK, but as a caregiver in the USA I can attest that the problems described in the article are as bad or much worse in most of the USA. Disabled people face lives of uncertainty and exploitation/abuse if they are not independently wealthy and if they don’t have excellent guardians protecting their fiscal and medical best interests.
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/health/article-11713065/BBCs-Humphrey-Hawksley-admits-keeping-disabled-autistic-son-Christopher-alive-wrong.html
BBC journalist Humphrey Hawksley poignantly admits keeping his severely disabled and autistic son Christopher, now 26, alive might have been the wrong thing to do - 20 years after writing despairingly of the dearth of help for his boy