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"How
Biased Adoption Language Tears Families Apart"
by Laurie Frisch
Language
that is biased or positive toward adoption benefits
the adoption industry in getting more babies for "sale"
and in building a "market" for babies. Honest
language that is not biased toward adoption must be reinstated
in order to protect American children and families.
If,
during wartime, an enemy soldier took a baby away from her
mother and this event was caught on film, people would be
horrified. But here in the United States, we have individuals,
lawyers and agencies advertising to moms and withholding important
information to get their babies, pressuring them to get their
babies, drugging them to get their babies or social services
just plain taking babies because the mother "looks poor".
Agencies and lawyers profit handsomely. People say when a
mother is unmarried she deserves it and it doesnt
matter how it will affect her child. Few people are aware
that fathers rights are being violated as well.
Why are
people so callous toward citizens of their own country? One
important influence on the way people think is the language
that is used. The adoption industry has deliberately marketed
a lexicon that is meant to marginalize natural mothers and
fathers and dehumanize them, giving legitimacy to a form of
inhumane exploitation that would otherwise be seen as cruel
and unnatural. Language that is biased or positive
toward adoption benefits the adoption industry in getting
more babies for "sale" and in building a "market"
for babies. Honest language that is not biased toward adoption
must be reinstated in order to protect American children and
families.
When
the word "parent" is used for a prospective adopter
who is unrelated to a child and the "birth" term
is used for the childs own mother, it is just expected
a mother must surrender her child. "Birth mother"
is like a job title or worse - she is merely a "thing"
whose function is to make a baby for others. Some adopters
like to abbreviate it as BM, likening the mother
of the child they have adopted to something to be flushed
down the toilet.
While
many in office claim to support fatherhood, how many are aware
that the National Council for Adoption website refers to fathers
as unmarried men. If the objective is to promote
fatherhood and marriage then acknowledging their fatherhood
would be a better way to go about it. Some agencies refer
to a father as an FOB (father of the baby), which
is so close to S.O.B. that the intent of the agency - to create
dissention between a father and mother or grandparents - cannot
be mistaken.
Everyone
recognizes that a parent has a right to raise his or her own
child. Yet in court when the foster caregiver or prospective
adopter is called a parent and the true parents
are called bios the outcome is predetermined.
After lengthy delays initiated by those in the system,
once they are finally in court the true parents of a child
may be proven to be fit in every way yet still have their
parental rights terminated.
Some
say its alright to take a baby from a naïve mother
or parents; they believe it is the parents choice
to surrender their child. Why is it that few mothers and fathers
in Sweden, New Zealand or Australia make a "choice"
to surrender their own children?
In Current
Adoption Policy and Practice - a comparison between North
America and Australia Evelyn Burns Robinson, MA, Dip
Ed, BSW states: South Australia was the first state
in Australia to put into place adoption legislation which
seeks to protect and support the relationship between a newborn
child and his or her family of origin, as well as allowing
equal access to adoption information when the adopted child
becomes an adult. Other states have followed with similar
adoption acts.
Private
adoptions are illegal in all states in Australia. All domestic
adoptions are enacted by the State Government departments
The
term birthmother is out of favor with many of
the support groups in Australia and certainly would never
be used, as I have heard it in North America, to describe
an expectant mother
This sinister use of the term birthmother
implies
that the separation of mother and child is a foregone conclusion.
In South
Australia, the father will be allowed time to establish paternity
and if recognized by the court as the father the fathers
consent is necessary before that child can be adopted.
Consent to adoption cannot be given until the child is at
least fourteen days old, there is a twenty-five day revocation
period, no prospective adopter is considered until after the
revocation period is past, and The mother of the child
must be given information in writing regarding the consequences
of the adoption, prior to any taking of consent.
By contrast,
American mothers are encouraged to select prospective adopters
prior to birth by those who know this will make it harder
for her to say no later. A mother may be even
be encouraged to surrender parental rights prior to birth
in some states such as Colorado. Often there is no revocation
period or the mother is not told there is a revocation period.
She is told her child will be better off instead
of being told the reality about the known consequences. Fathers
rights are largely ignored.
In the
United States, there was a time when only the masculine forms
of nouns and pronouns were used when speaking of people in
general. Feminists had to fight for language that made it
clear women are human beings, too. As a result, we now respect
and acknowledge women in our language choices by saying men
and women rather than just men and by using
"his/hers" not just "his". Women now wear
pants whenever they want to without apology to their husbands
for possibly offending them.
Using
language that is biased toward adopters promotes the separation
of a child from her own mother and family to provide a baby
for a stranger. When a mother loses her child to adoption
not only is the mother is affected but also the father, grandparents,
existing and future siblings as well as the child who has
been artificially orphaned and her descendents.
We must
change our habits and begin to respect, acknowledge, support
and value the true, natural family. The courts and the media
are at great fault for using biased language. The term birth
mother makes people think a mother is just the packaging
a baby comes in, meant to be tossed aside.
Every
citizen has a right and even an obligation to call a natural
mother a mother or natural mother
and thus prevent the temptation for others to separate children
from their family any time they feel like it or can profit
from it. Using the term "adoptive" for someone who
has adopted is not disrespectful but honest and will avoid
confusion about relationships. Any person who has adopted
and who truly cares about children should be in favor of adjusting
their language accordingly. Those who have not yet adopted
of course must be called prospective adopters,
not parents.
[Download
this press release as an Adobe PDF document http://mediaserver.prweb.com/pdfdownload/157137/pr.pdf]
Copyright
2004 Laurie Frisch
Contact
Information:
Laurie Frisch
Laurie_Frisch@hotmail.com
http://www.geocities.com/counting_to_ten/articles.html
(319) 373-7479
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