Possibly. Then again, she may refuse to acknowledge them as her real parents since she has no memory of them.Raven said:I didn't say she wouldn't know what a family is. I'm saying that her feelings about family life and biological maternity and how a move will affect her over the rest of her life are not going to be as complex now than they will be in the 10 or so years it'll take for her to grow up and realise all of a sudden she is at the center of a court case which potentially has globally important legal implications but more important than that she'll have to come to terms with being a person who was abducted from her true family home as a child and (i'm going to go with sold) into a life in another country whilst her real parents pleaded, begged, argued and campaigned for over a decade to have her returned. Whether she remembers the original event or not, this kind of shit is going to seriously mess with her head by the time she reaches an age where she will oh so much more crap to deal with...Angry Juju said:When you're 7 years old you're not freaking brain dead.. Jeez I mean the child's probably grown to love her adoptive parents. Taking her away from the ones she loves and saying "shut up, you don't know what a family is because you're too young" is possibly the most arrogant thing I could ever hear anyone say..Raven said:Its really not hard to put yourself in everyone's shoes here. Obviously the mum will want her daughter back. The kid is only 7 years old, she probably couldn't properly articulate in a sentence what family is yet let alone choose for herself who to live with.. Yeah it might sting for the adoptive parents but their feelings should come second to the mother and daughter.
It is probably better for a youngster to come to terms with something like this at her age than it is to suddenly be confronted with it at later life when she fully understands the implications of it later on. Yes it might be painful for a bit but seriously wake up. The world is a painful place and you can't shelter everyone from how shitty it can be. Just ask the girl's real parents for god's sake. This kid will grow up one day and either way be forced to come to terms with what has happened... Better that she doesn't properly understand it is what I say... For the same reason that you don't sit down explain to your 7 year old kid about death, crack addictions and sexual exploitation.
Has anybody even stopped to think the poor girl might end up being grateful for being returned to her real and loving parents?
She might refuse to acknowledge it but then someone of that age might refuse to acknowledge that a dentist isn't some one who only exists to cause you pain...samaugsch said:Possibly. Then again, she may refuse to acknowledge them as her real parents since she has no memory of them.
Because the United States is 4th on the human development index and Guatemala is 131st.Sixcess said:If this was reversed - a US born child kidnapped and now being raised in Guatemala the US State Department would be sending in the FBI, or the Marines.
That this is even being debated is double standards and nothing else.
Any parent worth their salt will give their child every possible advantage to succeed and be happy in life. The girl is a United States citizen. That very fact means she is guaranteed to a higher standard of living than someone in Guatemala. Thank you for trying to go against statistics, have a nice day.SillyBear said:What sort of life you have isn't solely dependant on what sort of country you live in. Nor is there a direct link between happiness and what country you live in.Ickorus said:It does really, whilst it is getting better Guatemala still isn't a the most stable of countries and crime is still extremely high; not the best country to raise a child, she'd have a much better life in America.
Just because the parents who adopted her live in the USA doesn't necessarily mean she will have a better life there than in Guatemala. It is also a horrible argument to use because it is essentially saying "These people can have her because they are American. Sorry, you don't get to have your child anymore".
And who are you to say we don't have the right to talk about this? You don't have the right to tell us what to do. We can talk about this all we goddamn want. We're not deciding shit. We're talking about it. If you don't like that, you have the right to leave.waj9876 said:I have no right to say anything about this. You who are reading this has no right to say anything about this. It's not up to us, we don't understand what any of them are going through. And frankly, I'm disgusted that any of you think that you do have a right to decide. And I'm glad that none of us do. I will admit, I have an opinion on the matter, but I'm not arrogant enough to believe that I'm right.
Both the biological mother, and the foster parents are/will be hurt from this. The child is, and will be, hurt from this. Stop judging these kinds of situations on "Good vs Evil" and "Which one makes me more sad." logic. It's not right, it's disgusting.
What in the fuck. Bought? Buy? The girl's not a fucking cat. Jesus Christ.evilthecat said:The adoptive parents bought a kidnapped child. Now, they didn't know they were buying a kidnapped child, but I would imagine under the circumstances they didn't check terribly hard. They wanted a child, someone offered them a child, they took it. They are responsible for their actions.
That is a complete over-simiplification of everything; firstly, who uses the HDI in it's pure form? The inequality-adjusted version is the HDI most used, as it is based on actual (nation's average), in stead of potential quality of life. USA is actually 23rd on that list (I can just taste the equality there!), compared to Guatemala's 92nd, much lower, but the family (i.e. biological mother AND father AND sibling) is at least upper-middle class(they live in the suburbs).Freechoice said:That this is even being debated is double standards and nothing else.
Because the United States is 4th on the human development index and Guatemala is 131st.
Anybody trying to say that she should go to the biological mother because of familial ties or emotions should not be allowed to reproduce.
Fine, I'll grant the first point (although that also favors what I say because Guatemala goes down in IAHDI as well, but whatever), complain about the second point on how the child will still probably be considered American by the courts if this doesn't actually get a trial and as for the third, the insult isn't petulance, it's a pseudo ad-hominem to berate the people who are trying to look at the topic from a moral standpoint as opposed to an economic/cultural standpoint and not looking at the actual goddamn numbers instead of just assuming that they're right.Mictarmite said:That is a complete over-simiplification of everything; firstly, who uses the HDI in it's pure form? The inequality-adjusted version is the HDI most used, as it is based on actual (nation's average), in stead of potential quality of life. USA is actually 23rd on that list (I can just taste the equality there!), compared to Guatemala's 92nd, much lower, but the family (i.e. biological mother AND father AND sibling) is at least upper-middle class(they live in the suburbs).
Secondly, the child is not a US citizen as all the legal documents are null and void due to the kipnapping and falsified documents.
Thirdly, your insult shows petulance, and an inability or unwillingness (much worse) to understand other people's viewpoints and arguments - It's also confusing, should people who believe/know that carrying and birthing a child (not to mention the 2 years of raising the child)leads to a deep connection, not be allowed to raise children? Surely they are the one's less likely to abandon or betray them than those who have no such connection after child birth.
This is all I need to say on this matter:Risingblade said:Maze1125 said:And what about the adoptive parents?Risingblade said:So her real parents have no right to have their daughter back? Someone can just kidnap your child give her to to someone else and you can't get them back? Love your logic there mate.Signa said:So the parents aren't allowed to love her like their own daughter because the paperwork was a fake? Sound logic.Risingblade said:Seriously these adoptive parents have no right to keep the child from her real parents. The whole adoption thing wasn't actually official anyway.
If you give her back to her biological parents then you're taking away the adoptive parents child.
Yeah, having your child taken away really really sucks, especially if there's no way to ever get them back.
So why are you advocating precisely that?
It's a fucked up situation either way I'm just saying that since the adoption was illegal and she was kidnapped from them first she should go back to them. It's not like they just abandoned her and they obviously love her hence the 5 years of searching. I'm worried about the precedent this case might set. That suddenly it will be ok to keep kidnapped children if they've been with you long enough.
I don't think it is that simple, and I think you're not giving the seven year old enough credit. Seven is about grade two, are you telling me that when you were seven you didn't know what a family was and that if someone had taken you away from yours that wouldn't have fucked you up? As far as that kid knows that's their family and they're old enough to be really traumatised by being separated from it. The goal here should be to find what's best for the child not what makes the parents biological or adoptive feel better. It's a horrible thing to have happened to the biological mother but it's unfair to the child to take them from their home.Raven said:Guys its not that difficult, the girl was freaking kidnapped, and at two years old its certainly something the mother will remember. It's not like the mum put her up for adoption and now all of a sudden wants her child back. The kid absolutely has to go back to her true biological mother without question.
Its really not hard to put yourself in everyone's shoes here. Obviously the mum will want her daughter back. The kid is only 7 years old, she probably couldn't properly articulate in a sentence what family is yet let alone choose for herself who to live with.. Yeah it might sting for the adoptive parents but their feelings should come second to the mother and daughter.
I'm frankly more concerned about how she came to be put up for adoption after being kidnapped and that what ever legal system that was taking care of the adoption clearly missed something pretty fucking important...
This explains a lot. You haven't done child psychology.Raven said:Parents produce offspring so they can raise them themselves. That is what a family is. A child belongs with her parents because that is what a family is.dumbseizure said:I am sorry, but this just blows my mind.
For starters, at home is where a child should be and with her parents? What is to say that she does not consider her where she lives and her foster parents her home and family? A large amount of people who have foster parents from a young age consider them their "real family and home".
This child was kidnapped, abducted, taken, stolen pick a word that makes it easier for you to understand. This child does not, and will not ever belong to that adopted family. The adoption was a fraud. Profit was likely involved. The foster parents, as much as I can sympathise with them, do not belong with this child.
Please can you recognise the difference between a legal adoption and an ongoing abduction which is exactly what this case is.
The fact that the child may recognise these adoptive parents as her true parents is a lie...
Until all the parties agree that it is in the best interest of the child that she remain with the adoptive parents and all the legal paperwork is settled, I will refuse to acknowledge that the child is where she should be.
You are speaking like someone who has clearly never met an adopted or fostered child who was aware of their own situation. You'll just have to trust me when I say that I have, and a 14 year old whirlwind of hormones and emotions reacts significantly worse to a situation such as being ripped from a family unit and being told they have a new family. I just can't stress this point enough.This also blows my mind.
Will PROBABLY come to terms with it EVENTUALLY? You are not building a strong case for this. What you are pretty much saying is that it may happen, or it may not, and yet you are for this based on chance.
Also, it wouldn't be worse at 14, because at the age she would have an understanding of what is going on. How do you explain to a 7 year old that the family she currently lives with isn't her real one, and that she has to move away to be with a family she may not even remember?
I'm not an expert on child psychology but I really feel it would be better for a child to go through this kind of thing now when they have barely begun school and making friends than be forced to make a decision at 18 years old when they are legally an adult and will face some extremely complicated decisions.
This child will discover all of this in a few years time. Trying to pretend it never happened will not make the problem go away. And after all this time she will still be registered as an abducted person whether she feels this way or not. As others have mentioned, those kind of legal issues cannot be magic'd away no matter how much you sit there and say "But she'll get upset"...
I personally am not interested in how individuals deal with emotions or how much we "think" individuals deal with them. I am interested in the long term benefit of the child and of the political and legal shit-storm that is brewing around it.
Thank you, Pretty much this.Lurklen said:I don't think it is that simple, and I think you're not giving the seven year old enough credit. Seven is about grade two, are you telling me that when you were seven you didn't know what a family was and that if someone had taken you away from yours that wouldn't have fucked you up? As far as that kid knows that's their family and they're old enough to be really traumatised by being separated from it. The goal here should be to find what's best for the child not what makes the parents biological or adoptive feel better. It's a horrible thing to have happened to the biological mother but it's unfair to the child to take them from their home.Raven said:Guys its not that difficult, the girl was freaking kidnapped, and at two years old its certainly something the mother will remember. It's not like the mum put her up for adoption and now all of a sudden wants her child back. The kid absolutely has to go back to her true biological mother without question.
Its really not hard to put yourself in everyone's shoes here. Obviously the mum will want her daughter back. The kid is only 7 years old, she probably couldn't properly articulate in a sentence what family is yet let alone choose for herself who to live with.. Yeah it might sting for the adoptive parents but their feelings should come second to the mother and daughter.
I'm frankly more concerned about how she came to be put up for adoption after being kidnapped and that what ever legal system that was taking care of the adoption clearly missed something pretty fucking important...