In other countries you did see things like nonconsensual sterilization, which is worse than this.Skgoa wrote:My point is that I don't think its enough to say "we started this with good intentions and it got out of control." Because 1) state welfare did not lead to such acts in other countries and 2) its not a slippery slope, the very first time someone thought of doing this, it was already 100% evil.Simon_Jester wrote:It is- but particularly during the '50s, '60s, and '70s, Australia seems to have made the leap.
If you start talking about how children should be taken from their parents for their own good, if their parents are unqualified to raise them, where do you stop?
Now, I don't have a big problem with the idea that "the state never has a right to take a mother's child away at birth." As long as it's recognized that this is, as you say, automatically 100% evil- and the implications of that are accepted.
Being determined not to let something like this happen again is a good thing. But we need to recognize what that means, and how nominally civilized people wound up doing it in the first place, or it'll just happen all over again.
So... you did not get the idea that I was saying that taking children from their mother at birth like that was 'right,' 'excusable,' or 'blameless?' OK, fine then.Eulogy wrote:I was talking about the social stigma part.Simon_Jester wrote:Did you catch my earlier post?
My entire point is that this sort of thing happens because people who think they know better decide that single mothers are, by definition, unfit to raise children. And so they take it upon themselves to snatch the children of single mothers out of those mothers' arms.
How on Earth did you get the idea that I was saying that such a thing was 'right,' 'excusable,' or 'blameless?'
But remember this the next time someone mouths off about how Group X shouldn't be allowed to raise kids- because this is exactly what happens when you follow that through to its logical conclusion.