Uhhh, does the legal document declare the child has no biological father...
More dopiness posing as a pseudo intellectual response to a previously stated logical falsehood.
Call me when a child is born as a result of a virgin birth, or some other "likely" possibility...
Oh, I know, scientists believe...
Or human cloning...
Today, right now, no child is born without male sperm involved, hence, de facto...a father...
Say some girl got pregnant, and the man who impregnated her died during the love making...still the child had a father.
Please, I trust you can do better than the silliness of some legal document, that has no relationship to a logical truth...
More dopiness posing as a pseudo intellectual response to a previously stated logical falsehood.
Call me when a child is born as a result of a virgin birth, or some other "likely" possibility...
Oh, I know, scientists believe...
Or human cloning...
Today, right now, no child is born without male sperm involved, hence, de facto...a father...
Say some girl got pregnant, and the man who impregnated her died during the love making...still the child had a father.
Please, I trust you can do better than the silliness of some legal document, that has no relationship to a logical truth...
Quote from neophyte321:
Someone Respond Directly to the Following Paragraph: (ANYTHING WILL BE ACCEPTED!)
http://www.city-journal.org/html/17...semination.html
.....
As intentionality has come to supplant biology, the law, by pretending nature doesnât exist, has not caught up with reality; it has pole-vaulted over it. A family court in Burlington County, New Jersey, recently put two women on a state birth certificatex Last year, Virginia issued a birth certificate for a gay couple that read âParent Aâ and âParent B.â Massachusetts officials proposed crossing out âFatherâ on the stateâs birth certificate and replacing it with âSecond Parentâ (until then-governor Mitt Romney nixed the plan). Many legal scholars are now proposing that courts move beyond the âheterosexist modelâ entirely. Why not put three parentsâor four, for that matterâon the birth certificate? This past January, an Ontario court did just that. Intentionality, it seems, can accomplish almost anything.
