![]() |
so did it turn up then?
|
Quote:
If anyone strikes me as being someone who would end up married to a cop and have kids with him + a little puppy,that's you. |
my initial reaction to someone about to leave a baby in my office would not be to post about it on the sy forum and call a hospital. thats what i grasp from this thread i cant really see much about it as i have the mentally ill on ignore.
|
Anyhow...
Since I'm sure you were all dying to know, they did drop the baby off (and for informational purposes, I wouldn't call the hospital - we ARE the first point of contact/dropoff, and we send the baby to the hospital after receiving it). My only concern was that I had to call a paramedic back here when they arrived, as you have to give the child to a uniformed firefighter/paramedic, and I worried that instead of waiting for the medic to arrive, they would just leave the baby and flee. There would be all kinds of legal issues there; it's not like I could physically stop them from leaving, but by not leaving the child with a uniform, they're breaking the law. So, I only had about ten minutes with the thing, which was frightening enough, as it was a day old, and crying ferociously. The ambulance then came back and transported it to the hospital where, as Kegmama's article somewhat describes, it goes through a bit of bureaucratic rigamarole prior to being placed for adoption. I would have pitied it, but as Tokolosh pointed out, the prospective life of a child in such incapable hands is quite dire. Chances are, it will be much better off, whatever situation it ends up in. I have mixed feelings about this law; loosely similar to the discussions on legalization of drugs and prostitution, there are different sides to the coin on the effects this may have. I'd prefer babies to be left on fire station doorsteps rather than immersed in last night's trash, but does this state-sanctioned "easy out" encourage carelessness in birth control? "Did you bring a condom? Ah, fuck it, the cop station's right around the corner." |
Quote:
Well, the nine-month wait followed by excruciating labor makes the "careless birth control" thing seem like a non-issue. That's what we have RU-486 for, remember? It does make flaking out easier, but this kind of desperation is rare in any case. I have a feeling you won't be dealing with this situation again any time in the foreseeable future. |
You'd be surprised; this is the third time in about 8 months.
And while your theory is logical to me, enough people as it is seem willing to tolerate/dismiss the minor annoyance of extreme, prolonged physical discomfort for one good screw, so I wouldn't put anything past that ilk. |
Wow.
I had no idea. Society is even more fucked up than I thought, and I already thought it was pretty fucked up. |
the law states that any person who has an unwanted baby for whatever reason can drop off the baby with a police station or a fire station and no questions will eb asked, nor will they be prosecuted.
this is a result of so many women and girls dumping babies in dumpsters or in garbage cans in alleys or just leaving them on doorsteps. It is harsh but it is a decent solution i think. that way child protective srervices can get involved before the baby suffers any damage. |
All times are GMT -5. The time now is 01:23 PM. |
Powered by vBulletin Version 3.5.4
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
All content ©2006 Sonic Youth