
Adoption is child abuse, slavery and rape all combined into one pretty package and marketed to wealthy infertile couples.
The abuse that the adoptee suffers thoughout their lives comes in many forms. As infants, they are separated from the only person they have ever known: their mothers. They are born into the world expecting to have the familiar scent of family and the warm voice they grew accustomed to in utero, and instead, they are handed over to strangers masquarating as “mommy” and “daddy.” Because of the severing of the child’s most natural bond occurs at a time when the child cannot communicate his emotions and experiences, it is a trauma that will stay with him into adulthood. Adopted people report to struggle with their identities as the legal lie that they are “as if born to” their adopters works better on paper than it does in the real world.
Adoptees are more likely to be physically and sexually abused. One fact that the adoption industry would love to ignore is the fact that children are more likely to be abused by people other than their true parents. This is really common sense. Mothers have the primial instinct to care for their children and to ensure the survival of their family trees. For true families, a baby is not valuable for profit but is living proof of the connection of the past and the future. Parents have the instinct to protect their children.
However, the abuse of the adopted child ins’t the only crime against him. Adoptees are stripped of their families, given new names and even false birth certificates make up a new generation of slaves in America. Children are sold like miniture slaves. Their birth records are alters to reflect the names of the adopters rather than their parents, and their true birth certificate is sealed away. They are the only Americans who are denied to know their own name and the names of their parents.
Some are abused, tortured and killed at the hands of those who claim to love them. Once a person has been stripped of their rights, taken from their family, and forced into an uncomfortable lie, there is no such thing as being fortunate. In their adopters homes, children are the ones who are expected to do the care taking, to compensate for the babies the adopters couldn’t have, to fill the void in a marriage that has gone stale, or to guard the adopters from the harsh realities of the world. Adoption’s smallest victims become slaves to the lies that surround them. Denied of their true parents whereabouts, they have nowhare to run. And they know what is expected of them to be “as if born to” their adopters, to act out the role they were purchased to play.
















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