TipsyTraveler
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Jan 9, 2014
- Messages
- 4,700
You think it’s not realistic to say pregnancy can cause complications, sometimes severe and/or lasting, up to and including death? As discussed earlier in the thread, the medically recognized period of time for a body to fully heal from a normal, uncomplicated birth is a year+, so that alone negates your claim that pregnancy is over and done in less than a year. Each pregnancy will affect a woman for closer to two years time, and that’s assuming everything goes well.Excellent use of the Strawman Logical Fallacy. That is, taking a true statement and stretching it to the nth degree so that it's no longer realistic.
Certainly some people have lasting issues from pregnancy, but that's not typical. Raising any child takes decades.
In any case, it’s laughable to me that you think potty training and teaching your child to drive are the hardships of parenting, “more difficult than the most difficult pregnancy.” You’re seriously minimizing a lot of women’s (sometimes traumatizing) experiences when you try to argue that what they went through medically couldn’t have been worse than having to help a 3rd grader with homework or putting a 2 year old on the toilet.
Unfortunately (or fortunately, depending on how you look at it), the majority of kids “in the system” are not available for adoption because they’re being held in foster care with the goal being reunification with their parent(s). The kids can spend years bouncing around, in and out of care, while their parent works on getting their life together so they can get their child back. If a parent doesn’t want to give up custody, they don’t have to. If it gets to a point where a court actually steps in and severs a parents rights, the court would look far and wide to place the kid with anyone even a little bit biologically related before allowing them to be adopted by a stranger. When I looked into domestic adoption, I learned only 25% of fostered children would ever become available for adoption. The rest are in a parental rights purgatory. And all that is only one of the hurdles to adoption. It’s not actually true that there are tons of available children just waiting for someone to come along and adopt them. Relatively few children are even available and it’s not an easy process, at all.Something no one's mentioned is that LOTS of kids "in the system" need homes.

We were going to try for one more but all my eggs are proving to be duds. 
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