It's that oneIf that's not fact, and we have ppl dying of starvation every day....then that means we have the means to feed everyone but ignore them...
It's that oneIf that's not fact, and we have ppl dying of starvation every day....then that means we have the means to feed everyone but ignore them...
You do that. The kids I want will be my own.Too many people having unplanned children instead of taking care of the children that are already on this planet that don't have a family.
Why, if I might ask?You do that. The kids I want will be my own.
No, I'm legit curious. As someone who would personally rather adopt a kid that faces being stuck in "the system," I just want to understand why someone would exclusively want a biological childdont be a simp
No, I'm legit curious. As someone who would personally rather adopt a kid that faces being stuck in "the system," I just want to understand why someone would exclusively want a biological child
Are you really comparing a human child to dog shitits like having to pick up and throw someone random's dog poop all the time, everyday for the rest of your life
I think what he's trying to say is that his satisfaction in caring for a child comes from feeling like he's propagating his own genetic line, and that helping someone else's child feels like taking care of someone else's problems. That impulse seems to make sense, at least from an evolutionary standpoint, even if I happen to feel otherwise. That being said, choosing to satisfy that impulse at the cost of everyone else's well-being is something I'd find distasteful.Are you really comparing a human child to dog shit
Already did.No, I'm legit curious. As someone who would personally rather adopt a kid that faces being stuck in "the system," I just want to understand why someone would exclusively want a biological child
The kids I want will be my own.
That's fair, but... I mean, would it really be any different in practice adopting an infant and raising them as you would your own child?Already did.
You know, I wouldn't mind having an adopted son or daughter but ultimately I'd rather have a little me, with my blood, my heritage, my surname and that I could call him truly, my son. Not an adopted son, my son.
I cherish these values very much and am not going to give them up.
Coincidentally, the fictional Saiyan (I pronounce it as sah·yun rather than the American say·un) race from Dragon Ball Z are alike.
That's fair, but... I mean, would it really be any different in practice adopting an infant and raising them as you would your own child?