My next door neighbors are a same sex couple who have adopted children from “horrible conditions” in China. Would they have been better off remaining in the Chinese system until adulthood?
sigh I’m probably going to get flak for this, but I only come here on the weekends per a ny resolution, so I won’t see anything after tomorrow.
Based on what one can imagine “horrible conditions” in China to be, probably not. It’s one thing to say that in theory, same sex couples shouldn’t be raise children. It’s different, however, to say that in a real circumstance in which a child living in “horrible conditions” could live in a land of opportunity, receiving rudamentary necessities with a same sex couple that the ideal would be for the child to remain in “horrible conditions”.
(Just an afterthought) Another thing to consider is that there are plenty of single people who adopt. It’s one thing to say that a same sex couple’s lifestyle may be damaging/confusing to the child. Granted that singles can’t provide the benefit of both parents (or even the potential of two incomes for the sake of providing), I think they should also be theoretically “barred” from adopting on the same principle.
So…your answer. This is how I would handle it: If they don’t engage me, I would seriously just keep to myself until I had asked the advice of someone else so that I could have the chance to discern what I should say. If I did decide to talk to them about it without being engaged, I would trust in the validity of my comments since no one asked me to make them. I wouldn’t ask for advice
after the fact either. If, on the other hand, I
were engaged and I were given the chance to say something, I would maintain a polite, neutral stance until I had asked for guidance/counsel/advice and then say something at the next opportunity. Thinking before we speak/think is something I feel has gone out of style. If you’ve given an answer, you’ve given it.
God bless,
Rob