22:22:09 o'clock GMT
people are giving away their children, with no accountability to them
Unsurprisingly, the donated feel abandoned because sperm is imported and exported inter-country, making their full roots impossible to trace, so donorship does not give the "same rights as others prior to birth" in The United Nations Convention On The Rights Of The Child, paragraph nine in its premable.
Orphaned children are a forgotten option in our culture in quests for a brand new child instead. This quest costs £15,000 after all efforts have been tried and fails 50 per cent of the time overall, after all assisted reproduction attempts have been tried, 3 attempts being what are expected to be enough for sperm to be accepted by the recipient's body.
The best these children get is to be told that they have a donor somewhere who is special, but this reverses the situation of an adopted child being told that they are special which is told so that they feel more secure with the adopting family than they would otherwise. Please see this information-absent travesty on http://www.donor-conception-network.org/telltalkpubs.htm
Living the donated life is not like living the step-family life or coming from any estranged pair of adults as adoptees do because the donated are not with their roots and are not allowed to think of them, and the grief at the loss of those the donated cite as thier parents, namely the donors, is not understood by recipient parents, instead they expect their donated child to love them. The donateds' sites are on the link below.
We're deeply concerned that the need for a father for the donor-conceived is under discussion at UK government level, in spite of almost every other child having the option to see their fathers if they want to, so in the interests of the welfare of children we created this campaign.
Please send an email of support via this link >
http://needing-fathers.blogspot.com
Tags: The United Nations Convention On The Rights Of The Child cTags: children's rights
Written by
smhappygolucky
Link to this entry
|
Blog about this entry
|
Add to del.icio.us |
digg this
This entry has comments:
Add your own