• Sandinband [any, comrade/them]@hexbear.net
    link
    fedilink
    English
    arrow-up
    10
    ·
    1 year ago

    Alternatives to adoption that are not buying a human being:

    Kinship care: a lot of people do this without realizing its an alternative to adoption, ex: being raised by a grandparent or other relative

    Community care: most examples i can think of are indigenous children being raised by non relatives in their community so they can be raised in the culture but this can be applied to other groups, ie: its better if a poc is raised by another poc within their culture so they aren’t separated from it, also they don’t have to experience the awful abuse that is one’s adoptive parents and entire extended family being racist to you (also made worse if the adopters are in a majority white area so you get the racism at school and home, ask me how I know agony-shivering )

    Worse case scenario that isn’t adoption that really wouldn’t be as common as non adoptees think: guardianship, you don’t own the child, you do not get to rename them, you do not get to have their birth certificate redone with your information which seals their old birth certificate - making it incredibly difficult to find their biological family if they want to, and you do not get to hide their medical information from them

    At the end of day, the focus should be on the children and not the adults who want a child. Getting the child back to their biological family should be the priority. There really aren’t as many “kids without homes” that non adoptees think there are and many of the “domestic supply of infants” as mentioned in the roe v wade overturning wouldn’t exist if it weren’t for systemic racism and the resulting poverty.

    Also it is incredibly hurtful to think of adoption as your worst case scenario when you can’t have a biological child. We are people harmed by the worst of capitalism, misogyny, and imperialism, not a last resort.

    • autismdragon [he/him, they/them]@hexbear.net
      link
      fedilink
      English
      arrow-up
      9
      ·
      1 year ago

      Also it is incredibly hurtful to think of adoption as your worst case scenario when you can’t have a biological child.

      I don’t think this. I would have be leaning adoption even if I could have a child before the information you’ve told me here. Because I thought it was the less harmful option due to antinatalist arguments (Not an antinatalist, but their arguments influenced me this way).

      Anyway the options you present above arent really available for me. Im distant from my family and not active in my community. And unfortunately because of my autism and the way that childcare is corrupted by capitalism my options for working in childcare are limited. Ive done it before and talked a lot about how that experiance was ruined for me in vairous ways. Id be completly satisifed taking care of other people’s kids in perpetuity if I could, I think.

      you do not get to rename them, you do not get to have their birth certificate redone with your information which seals their old birth certificate - making it incredibly difficult to find their biological family if they want to, and you do not get to hide their medical information from them

      I wouldnt do any of this anyway? Is this stuff inherent to adoption somehow in ways that Im not aware of? I guess what i was thinking of as “adoption” is just guardianship then. I would have no desire to erase the original biological family of a child I was the guardian of. I’m not insecure like that. I wouldn’t want to own the child. I agree with your child-first philosophy here.

      Also sounds like it would be better if I adopted (or did guardianship for?) a white child, even though before this conversation saying that phrase would have disgusted me as obviously racist lol. Since it sounds like the complications for poc children adopted by white parents are significant.

      wouldn’t exist if it weren’t for systemic racism and the resulting poverty.

      I mean, I agree with this, but we’re a long way off from providing economic justice for everyone. And there would still be cases like teen parents who are simply not ready to raise a kid.

      I thank you for your experiance as an adoptee though. But do you have sources that your experience is more than anecdotal?

      • Sandinband [any, comrade/them]@hexbear.net
        link
        fedilink
        English
        arrow-up
        3
        ·
        1 year ago

        Like, I want a kid if I ever get decently financially stable, I love kids and the idea that I might never get to have a few of my own is a major source of my depression. But I’m getting old and my current partners both like and want kids but are far away from me, and not financially stable either, and are trans women so we can’t have biological kids

        I honestly don’t see how this isn’t framing adoption as your last resort before just not having kids?

        Anyway the options you present above arent really available for me.

        If adoption or an alternative has to happen the priority should be the child, not the adults.

        I wouldnt do any of this anyway? Is this stuff inherent to adoption somehow in ways that Im not aware of?

        Yes. This is standard in the us.

        Also sounds like it would be better if I adopted (or did guardianship for?) a white child

        Yes, if you are white it is better you raise a white child than a non white child

        And there would still be cases like teen parents who are simply not ready to raise a kid.

        With access to better sex ed, contraceptives, and abortion there would not be a large domestic supply of infants. Also many teen parents do not want to give their child up for adoption but are coerced with financial incentives.

        I mean, I agree with this, but we’re a long way off from providing economic justice for everyone

        The current solution to this is not to buy a human being, it is to support struggling families via mutual aid or the previous alternatives to adoption mentioned. Obviously under the current system there are children in need but the system perpetuates the conditions that create children in need so they can be sold to white, wealthy families who want infants (i specify infants as they are the gold standard for what most adoptive families want and theyre the most expensive to adopt) so choosing to participate in it helps create financial incentives for the industry

        I fucked up the formating so I have to put this down here, sorry

        not active in my community. And unfortunately because of my autism and the way that childcare is corrupted by capitalism my options for working in childcare are limited

        That is not what I meant by community care, a different example: you’re a white person who grew up in say New Orleans, it would be better for you to raise a white child also from New orleans so they would be closer to their biological family and raised in a somewhat similar culture to what they would have anyway. This is preferable to you buying a Black kid from Haiti and raising them in a majority white area.

        If youre officially diagnosed with autism it will heavily effect your ability to adopt in the traditional sense. The system is also incredibly ableist, which effects which mothers have their children taken away and in turn, also effects who can buy their child. If youre not officially diagnosed it probably won’t effect you or if you have enough money

        Also fucked up the formating again and can’t do a quote for your last part, sorry

        What sources do you want for my experience not being “more than anecdotal”? The examples of children being taken from their mothers due to ableism, racism, imperialism, and classim? How adoptees do better when not completely separated from their country of birth and culture to be raised by and around no one who looks like them? Adoption being a tool of genocide? Other experiences from actual adoptees and not the adoption agencies that profit off of selling us?

        Genuinely asking

        • autismdragon [he/him, they/them]@hexbear.net
          link
          fedilink
          English
          arrow-up
          4
          ·
          1 year ago

          Other experiences of adoptees or preferably even data surveying them would be great yeah. The thing I’m curious about is your individual negative experience.

          I honestly don’t see how this isn’t framing adoption as your last resort before just not having kids?

          Sorry to give that impression. My later statement clarifies that adoption would (have been) my first choice regardless. That said, I do feel like your stance here kind of stigmatizes queer couples in a way I’m a bit uncomfortable about.

          If adoption or an alternative has to happen the priority should be the child, not the adults.

          I agree with this. I think you’re writing me off as a narcissist that I am very much not. I am very much a child-first person. I can see now how phrasing things as “wanting to have a kid” could be seen that way, even though its a very common desire. Im more interested in being involved in the care of children in any possible way because its the only thing that drives me. But I would also prefer to have the chance to have a child I am the primary guardian of because caring for other people’s children can be a frustrating experience when they are neglectful or abusive. Honestly, my experiance in childcare, and one shared by many people I know who’s experiance with their biological parents were negative, is that a person’s biological family are often the WORST people for that child. “Parental rights” is a right wing dogwhistle for a reason, and a cover for abuse. I’m a community based childcare advocate (kids should have a variety of nonfamily adults in their lives so abuse has no place to hide) but getting us to that point is a long way off.

          Yes. This is standard in the us.

          Thats awful. Can I just like, not do that though? Surely as the person doing the adopting I would have the choice to say “No, I dont want to erase this kid’s past, that is not my goal”.

          Yes, if you are white it is better you raise a white child than a non white child

          I can see how this is true, but I also can’t shake the feeling that there is something racist or “woke segregation” about this attitude as well? I have mixed feelings about it.

          With access to better sex ed, contraceptives, and abortion there would not be a large domestic supply of infants. Also many teen parents do not want to give their child up for adoption but are coerced with financial incentives.

          Agreed with the first part obviously. With the second part though, I’m a bit hesitant to say that a naive child who thinks they want to keep their child should be able to. I’m not sure they are ready to consent to that. If they have family who are able to help them then sure, but if they’d be the only caregiver? I feel like that almost always ends poorly for the child. Are we acutally being child-first here or are we being biological parent-first? Because there’s a pretty big difference, and the two are often inappropriately conflated.

          The current solution to this is not to buy a human being, it is to support struggling families via mutual aid or the previous alternatives to adoption mentioned. Obviously under the current system there are children in need but the system perpetuates the conditions that create children in need so they can be sold to white, wealthy families who want infants (i specify infants as they are the gold standard for what most adoptive families want and theyre the most expensive to adopt) so choosing to participate in it helps create financial incentives for the industry

          First of all, I would rather NOT have to pay money for a child because I find that system disgusting too. Children shouldnt be a market. But I mean, is your answer here to leave kids in the system? Surely a stable home is better for kids than the system? And again the more I write about this the more I want to say, what about kids from genuinely abusive homes. There are a LOT of those. And the more I read about your stance the more I think your stance is inappropriately weighting the rights of a biological parent OVER that of the child, while claiming to be child-first.

          That is not what I meant by community care, a different example: you’re a white person who grew up in say New Orleans, it would be better for you to raise a white child also from New orleans so they would be closer to their biological family and raised in a somewhat similar culture to what they would have anyway. This is preferable to you buying a Black kid from Haiti and raising them in a majority white area.

          OK, so adopt/be a guardian for a local kid. Got it.

          I am officially diagnosed and yes thats a concern of mine. Honestly I realize that none of this is probably ever going to be a possibility for me anyway. And that makes me very sad. Because I am very good with kids and I know I’d be a good father.