SpergioLeonne
kiwifarms.net
- Joined
- Feb 7, 2022
Oh it is. You can’t apply that law to Muslims. See: RotherhamWow, the UK isn't as big of a shithole as I thought it was.
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Oh it is. You can’t apply that law to Muslims. See: RotherhamWow, the UK isn't as big of a shithole as I thought it was.
Nah, you're thinking of the shitposters.Hey, if you want a sanitized internet go to boomerbook or X or tiktok. Its the shit posters who make the internet great.
Well, I listed only two exceptions that I think are exploitative per se, and those are surrogacy, and prostitution. I don't think people should be able to sell these two things, and I don't think people should be allowed to buy these two things. I guess I could get super pedantic and put "literal slavery, adult human" and "selling human organs for money" as two more things that you also shouldn't be allowed to buy and sell purely on principle. But that's about it.The complaints of "exploitation" and "class conflict" are rather insulting. All "work" can be exploitive. From the marixst perspective all work is exploitive under capitalism. All rich people not doing hard labor along side the toiling masses is "class conflict". Is it a problem that Bill Gates doesn't weld for his pay? Well I'm not a marxist, so to me it isn't. Why is this service suddenly exploitive when there is more dangerous and far more common services being provided. It isn't.
Overall I think it is a good thing. Any technology or practice which allows men, straight or gay, to have children independent of traditional arrangements with women is a boon to society, not a disservice. Society and women, have made it clear that marriage and the traditional path will not insulate men from the horrific outcomes of the law. Why should men bother with it at all? Especially successful men who have more to lose from a failed marriage than a poor man, though he is burned as well.
i don't really see any problem with this. i'm not really religious or pro life so i don't have any moral qualms against IVF being used. it's just another medical tool, similar to giving a person born without a hand a moving cybernetic hand or somethingMost IVF seeking couples never find any medical reason for their 'unexplained infertility'; it just doesn't work for them. People don't go to the IVF clinic for treatment for their infertility, they go there because they want a fucking baby.
counterpoint: children being molested is bad. giving single or gay men easy access to them is bad because it's more likely to lead to children being molestedAny technology or practice which allows men, straight or gay, to have children independent of traditional arrangements with women is a boon to society, not a disservice.
You aren't buying a baby with surrogacy. The "value" of a baby is irrelevant. What is the value of gestation. You are paying for services you can't do yourself. In the same way you pay a surgeon for example. Hauling bricks to build the Pharoah's Pyramid is probably more dangerous and degrading for your body than being a surrogate, and most definitely more so than being a prostitute. As to the "something unique" part, I had no idea sex removed something physical from a woman, how very incel of you, and as for the child part, you can have children you aren't being paid to gestate if you want one so bad.I think: selling sex and reproduction as services is as degrading and dehumanizing as selling persons as chattel. The sale of surrogacy and gametes is two (2) asshairs away from the organ trade. I don't think there's a price you can put on surrogacy that would equal the value of that baby's life at birth. These "services" are categorically different from paying me to do receptionist work, or buying duck eggs from me, or hiring me to hang onto your dog for a week, or making me haul bricks to build Pharoah's Pyramid would be. None of those scenarios would involve 3rd party acquiring something unique from my body that can't be replaced.
I already knew the cost and it is far cheaper a price than not having primary custody of your children and paying child support. Divorce is financially and socially ruinous for a lot of men. A hundred thousand and no legal obligations to the mother is rather cheap, and this assumes price will not decrease as this practice grows in acceptance. If anything, not having to worry about the mother turning your own children against you is itself alone worth every penny.lol ^^ this guy is going to flip his shit when he finds out what contractual surrogacy costs in non-shithole countries. I priced it out a couple of years back and it was ~$100,000 per singleton pregnancy. If you thought society and women are "divorce raping a man's wallet" when marriages break down, then buying a surrogacy contract would be like a Shoah of wallets for you. To say nothing of actually supporting that kid in the future.
counter-counterpoint: women are more likely to abuse children than men, and are more likely to murder them.counterpoint: children being molested is bad. giving single or gay men easy access to them is bad because it's more likely to lead to children being molested
Any IVF debate should have ended here, honestly. More often than not, just like surrogacy, it's a tool of the rich and/or defective. You either get misogynists like Elon Musk using it to only shit out boys (only to wind up with a troon as retribution), or literal tards like two people I know. He's an infertile autist who has mommy pay for everything, she's a tard who miscarries anytime the IVF tries to take, they shove 7 animals into a small apartment. Just stop. It's natures way of saying don't reproduce.Nick Fuentes was an IVF baby. That should be enough argument against it right there.
And then there's this. I love seeing rightoids using IVF while simultaneously crying about muh abortion. There was some story recently of some gay right wing anti-abortion moid couple having an IVF baby. The absolute state of the right. If it weren't for double standards, there'd be none.And then there's the issue of the leftovers. No one ever has all their embryos implanted unless the process was a disaster and they only ever got one or two viable embryos. It is not ethically consistent to hold a pro-life position and also support IVF treatment, which by its very nature requires large scale destruction of viable embryos. If life begins at conception, those 'snowflake' unimplanted embryos which get flushed after five years' storage are lives. They are deliberately created lives, with a mother and father and everything. And they are flushed as the unwanted by products of medical progress. Guess the test tube should have kept its legs closed, eh?
They don't. Don't want to do it, don't do it. I really don't get the entitlement argument in this particular context. Essentially it's a service people are doing voluntary that you pay for. Women should have enough agency to deal with that themselves. Granted it does carry some health risks, but so do many jobs yet they aren't outlawed outright.Why should a woman have to carry a child, altering her body, for someones vanity, so they can carry on muh genes? Why should she be pumped with hormones, risk death in childbirth which, yes, still happens in the so-called first worl
I am pretty willing to make that argument for a range of illnesses.They don't. Don't want to do it, don't do it. I really don't get the entitlement argument in this particular context. Essentially it's a service people are doing voluntary that you pay for. Women should have enough agency to deal with that themselves. Granted it does carry some health risks, but so do many jobs yet they aren't outlawed outright.
I also find it strange that so many people argue that someone that can't have children naturally shouldn't have them because it's somehow by design. We use science all the time to fight with nature and sometimes we win, sometimes we don't. We wouldn't make that argument when it comes to illness, so why would that be decisive when it comes to having children.
Whats wrong with that i love DOING *HORRENDOUS ACT* ON CHILDREN C-PEDO-YThat would include all men since they rape way more kids than lesbians.
"It isn't a service because the woman can't off the baby after it's born!"You aren't paying for the service of gestation, by the way, or the woman could fulfil her contract by giving birth and immediately fetus deletus.
But it isn't just her child. It's his child as well, and if its done with a donated egg, the baby isn't even the surrogates.You are paying for a baby. You give her money and in return for money she hands over her child. Blood of her blood, flesh of her flesh.
Aren't you pro-abortion? Oh the irony. Surrogacy is a good thing; it will continue to grow in use and acceptance.Anyone who fails to understand the gravity of that is not fully engaging with the ethical issues involved. Nor are they giving due weight to the future of the child. The child is sidelined totally by focusing on the buyers and muh poor buyers and their empty cribs.
I am not implying that everything that's scientifically possible should be allowed, that wasn't the point. My point was that just because something wouldn't work naturally (eg, having children or surviving an illness), it shouldn't automatically be illegal. I find that argument logically inconsistent unless you are firmly in the god's plan camp.I respect the argument that "everything that is scientifically possible is valid". I don't agree with it in respect of human reproduction, because there's a party involved there who can't be asked for their consent at all and yet is the one living with the consequences.
That's an oversimplification. Especially once IFV is involved, there's a lot that can go wrong. If IFV doesn't work, you generally still have to pay for it. So it can hardly be classified as buying a baby outright.You aren't paying for the service of gestation, by the way, or the woman could fulfil her contract by giving birth and immediately fetus deletus. You are paying for a baby. You give her money and in return for money she hands over her child. Blood of her blood, flesh of her flesh. Anyone who fails to understand the gravity of that is not fully engaging with the ethical issues involved.
Maybe I am missing something here, but what is the connection between surrogacy and the future of the child? Like I said earlier, children can be born into fucked up circumstances the natural way as well and I don't see why parents that used surrogacy or adopted the child at birth are automatically more dangerous for the child's wellbeing. If anything the surrogacy route slightly improves the position of the child on average since the parents are more likely to be wealthy since the process can generally only be afforded by wealthy people unless there's insurance coverage. Not that I think that would skew it meaningfully one way or another.Nor are they giving due weight to the future of the child. The child is sidelined totally by focusing on the buyers and muh poor buyers and their empty cribs.
I notice you do that a lot, "what about muh Rodrigues', what about muh Duggars?" Your broken little brain only allows you to focus on anecdotes because cherry picked instances of confirmation bias are the fuel you run on for some reason.Is that why people like the Rodrigues' are allowed to breed like German roaches and abuse and starve their kids while CPS shits itself and does nothing?
I am explaining how contract law works. If the only thing required by the contract was the service of gestation itself, there would be no contractual requirement to deliver the baby to the buyers safely or indeed at all. It's not a contract for services. It is also, and indeed principally, a contract for delivery of a human baby."It isn't a service because the woman can't off the baby after it's born!"
I've heard and seen some very stupid shit on this website from cows and users alike, but this has to take the cake.
But it isn't just her child. It's his child as well, and if its done with a donated egg, the baby isn't even the surrogates.
Aren't you pro-abortion? Oh the irony. Surrogacy is a good thing; it will continue to grow in use and acceptance.
I think situations where a woman's sister for example is her surrogate because she can not have kids due to a previous injury or disease and the sister is doing it only out of love and kindness and is fully supported through the entire process and also stays in the child's life I would have less of a problem with it (though I would still see it as going against god's will).I don't have any particular opinion or position on surrogacy. But I have a question for some that do, like @Lidl Drip @Heckler1 @CoolFool and anyone else who is opposed to it for its commercial and wealth aspect.
Is the power and wealth disparity at the center of your criticism or only a side issue? If we imagined a purely fictional situation where the only surrogacy that happened was ideologically driven and instead of large business, something that only had a small compensation of time/medical costs, a kind of expenses paid rather than a reward situation. And where the recipients were similarly people of all walks of life and wealth, because there wouldn't be a cost associated with it. And let's for complete fantasy sake, also assume this happened with relatively little corruption.
I know were getting at utopian levels of hypothesis here, but I really wish to understand; is it that the surrogacy, the trade of pregnancy risks and costs for giving people a child to love and take care off, to brighten their lives as they brighten it, is the main problem the unfairness of people who have access to receiving the such a child and the unfairness of the likely poor women who might be persuaded to donate their time and risk their health for this service?
Is it more fundamental and that you believe that young women are unable to make this choice responsibly for themselves in the real world situation?
Or... ?
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And here a question for everyone: do we have any stats on how surrogate mothers feel about their choice a week, a year, 5 years after their choice to become one?
What the fuck.I recently saw a video of a gay couple berating their surrogate WHILE SHE WAS GIVING BIRTH because she didn't wax her vagina for it
Two separate issues IMO. IVF has its own issues, kids born via it have roughly double the rate of defects as regular conception. There’s also a distinction between various types - it can use your own sperm and eggs, and for example sort for one sex only so you avoid having a child with a sex linked lethal allele being passed on. Or ISCI with your own gametes. IVF with purchase gametes is a different thing, and a more moral grey area.How do you feel about people who can not have kids naturally doing in vitro fertilization or surrogacy to have/buy a child?