I
InSearchofGrace
Guest
Same sex couples advancing gay ‘marriage’ and adoption rights tend to make this kind of argument, putting side by side an example of the better or best case of same sex parenting with the worse / worst scenario of heterosexual parenting. A case in point is the submission of a post regarding a same sex white male couple adopting a black baby from a disadvantaged home environment.Looking for help to articulate an answer to a question I was asked and did not answer well. Any help appreciated:
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?
If you were asked and did not give an articulated answer, it’s better to let it go. I doubt that any conversation with your neighbors who already have the child from China would matter. China is clawing its way to world class status with its purchasing power now, but the people are headed for social disaster with millions of marrying-age men with little prospect of finding wives because of one child per family laws and selective abortion of unborn female babies that has been going on since 1978.
To go back to the issue you bring up, however, here is a part of an article by Dale O’Leary that I think is pertinent in case you are again engaged in discussion over it:
Doesn’t everyone have a right to children?
Persons with SSA are human beings. It is natural for them to want to experience the joy of having children: to love, to nurture, to leave a legacy. There is nothing wrong with a woman wanting to become pregnant and bear a child, or a man wanted to experience the joy of seeing his son grow into manhood or his daughter develop into a beautiful woman.
But children are not trophies, or a way to meet one’s personal needs, or props to help forward an ideology. People are not a means to an end; they are meant to be loved for their own sake. Therefore no one has a “right” to a child. It is children who have the rights. When circumstances separate a child from one or both biological parents, adults should try to create a situation for him that is as normal as possible. No matter how honourable the intention, no one has the right to compound the tragedy of separation from biological parents by subjecting a child to another sub-optimal situation.
Read whole article here.Activists may claim that couples with SSA are “rescuing” children by adopting them out of poverty or other hard circumstances. Although laudable, this intent does not negate the real problems caused by same-sex parenting: problems deeper and longer-lasting than material deprivation. This argument also loses force when you consider the many roadblocks to adoption faced by stable, well-to-do married couples. Same-sex adoption doesn’t provide more homes for needy children – it just keeps those children away from married couples who would otherwise adopt them.