Originally posted by gribbler
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A child: lost, found, and lost again.
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Try http://wordforge.net/index.php for discussion and debate.
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Originally posted by Dinner View PostWhat does "system of desert" mean? And why should I cut rural areas slack if the objection is true?
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Why? The relative number of racists is higher in rural areas. It only makes sense since more cosmopolitan areas have more diversity while rural areas tend not to. Less interaction with people of other races means less opportunity to realize we're not so different. Rural Alabama simply has a higher rate of bigots than NYC. There seems to be a strong correlation to me.
Less interaction with other races means less opportunity to see stereotypes aren't right.Try http://wordforge.net/index.php for discussion and debate.
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Just to be clear: you're talking about taking the girl away from the people she thinks of as her parents, along with any other children they might have--her siblings--her friends, her school, her church if she goes there, any extracurricular activities...you are proposing removing her from her entire life as she knows it, to go and live with a stranger in a country she likely remembers little of, with a culture she won't understand, living a life that's entirely foreign to her. That's not the sort of thing you should do lightly, and certainly not on the grounds that she's some sort of stolen goods.
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My head is starting to spin following this: "a group of people I don't know but have a number of received unpleasant opinions about should be avoided because, of course, they subscribe to a bunch of unpleasant received opinions about people they don't know!"
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Originally posted by gribbler View PostYes it can. You want the child to suffer as well as its adoptive parents so that the mother doesn't suffer. How is more suffering better than less suffering?Do not fear, for I am with you; Do not anxiously look about you, for I am your God.-Isaiah 41:10
I praise you because I am fearfully and wonderfully made - Psalms 139.14a
Also active on WePlayCiv.
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The Adoptive parents are, in all likelihood, considered by the child. All else being equal they clearly ought to raise her in view of that. Access rights for the mother seem reasonable though and may benefit the child"You say that it is your custom to burn widows. Very well. We also have a custom: when men burn a woman alive, we tie a rope around their necks and we hang them. Build your funeral pyre; beside it, my carpenters will build a gallows. You may follow your custom. And then we will follow ours."--General Sir Charles James Napier
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Would there even be a question of the proper disposition of the child if her biological parents were Americans. I'm pretty sure the decision would be automatic to return her to her biological parents unless her biological parents were unfit.
I'm wondering why she was adopted in the first place. Her adoptive parents have one biological child of their own. Having has a kid of their own they intending to save a third world orphan? How did that turn out? Someone went out and made her an orphan because they expected a profit from the transaction. Was her adoption really through legitimate formal channels or was it the product of large sums of cash paid to "private" agents? Maybe if people who want to adopt foreign orphans weren't paying small fortunes - amounts far larger than the actual cost, tragedies like this wouldn't happen."I say shoot'em all and let God sort it out in the end!
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If her biological parents were Americans, I would be less hesitant to return the child, but only because the transition would be somewhat less traumatic and she might have an easier time keeping in touch with the people she thinks of as "family." In fact, if the birth parents were American you could probably work out some sort of joint custody deal.
The problems with international adoptions are a separate, but of course very real, issue.
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Wow. If this is at all accurate, it makes the adoptive parents look very bad:
The daughter of Loyda Elizabeth Rodríguez and Dayner Orlando Hernández, both twenty-four years old, was kidnapped on November 3, 2006 from their home. They reported Anyelí’s kidnapping the same day. The couple had two other children together, and two-year-old Anyelí was their middle child and only daughter. After years of pleading with authorities to help find her missing daughter, Loyda finally found a photo she believed to be Anyelí in Guatemalan immigration records, in the adoption file of a child called “Karen Abigail López García.”
But the child had already been taken out of the country. “Karen Abigail” left Guatemala aboard Continental airlines flight #457 on December 9, 2008 with a new set of parents, Jennifer Vanhorn Monahan and Timothy Monahan of Liberty, Missouri. They were clients of the Florida-based adoption agency Celebrate Children International, a Christian nonprofit with a serious complaint history dating back to the company’s start in 2004. A “contact” for the agency, a young Guatemalan man in his 20′s named Marvin Bran had initially offered “Karen Abigail” to agency director Sue Hedberg for placement. When the Monahans accepted an adoption referral for “Karen Abigail,” the lawyer listed on their Guatemalan Power of Attorney form was none other than César Augosto Trujillo, the same man who handled many other “Marvin Bran babies,” including the little girl at the heart of my book: Fernanda Alvarado.
The Monahans’ adoption was a slow, tangled process that began in 2006. By July 2007, a failed DNA test revealed that a fake birth mother had relinquished “Karen Abigail.” According to emails the Monahans sent to Guatemalan private investigators, they were distressed and confused. They’d already waited seven months for the adoption to move forward, with almost no progress.[i] On August 1st, Jennifer Monahan wrote in her personal timeline of the adoption that agency head Sue Hedberg had planned to ask LabCorp, the primary DNA testing facility in the US used for adoptions, to “bury” the results of the mismatched test. But “LabCorp can’t do that anymore,” Monahan noted, because of newly tightened regulations. She’d grown suspicious about what was unfolding in the adoption, and took careful notes of everything that transpired, including, her notes say, recording conversations with Sue Hedberg. When Monahan asked Hedberg what could be done after the child’s failed DNA test, aparently seeking alternative ways to push the adoption through, Hedberg responded that Marvin might bring the child to an orphanage, where she might eventually become declared abandoned. Or, Hedberg said, Bran might dump the girl “somewhere where nobody could find her.” In subsequent emails, Monahan said she was “terrified.”No, I did not steal that from somebody on Something Awful.
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Originally posted by The Mad Monk View PostWow. If this is at all accurate, it makes the adoptive parents look very bad:
A hell of a lot more here.
Irresponsible journalism.“As a lifelong member of the Columbia Business School community, I adhere to the principles of truth, integrity, and respect. I will not lie, cheat, steal, or tolerate those who do.”
"Capitalism ho!"
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It's hard to get to the bottom of this based on the limited information at TMM's site, but it seems the adoptive parents displayed atrociously poor judgment at the least, and then tried to resort to a coverup as a desperation ploy once they'd already invested a lot of time and money. A comment on that site also claims that the girl has spent three years, not five, with the APs. I don't know what the correct response is.
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I don't see any actually evidence of that beyond the writer's speculation. Rather, in the primary sources, I see adoptive parents fearful of losing the child that they have formed an attachment to, and possibly being shook down by the adoption agency.“As a lifelong member of the Columbia Business School community, I adhere to the principles of truth, integrity, and respect. I will not lie, cheat, steal, or tolerate those who do.”
"Capitalism ho!"
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The correct response is to send the child back to live with her real parents and 2 biological brothers. An 8 year old will be able to adapt quickly. If (in the litigious USA) the moneyed adoptive parents, who seem to have known there was a problem with the legitimacy of the adoption, fight for years and lose, it would be much more difficult for a 12 or 15 year old to move back to Guatemala.
Celebrate Children International gets an "F" http://www.bbb.org/central-florida/b...do-fl-62845800There's nothing wrong with the dream, my friend, the problem lies with the dreamer.
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