But instead no one has to be responsible for anything because of this fatalistic attitude towards having children as though it is inevitable. — Andrew4Handel
Thus having a child would allow the new person to experience their potential for happiness. — schopenhauer1
I don't understand what you're saying here. What sort of intervention in the free ability of prospective parents to have children are you imagining? — Pseudonym
In Germany children are forceably taken away from their parents for 6 hours a day to be raised entirely in a manner the state sees fit. What greater application of government to the rearing of children could you possibly be asking for? — Pseudonym
You are taking an unwarranted fatalistic attitude. — Andrew4Handel
The school does not act like parents or baby sitters or replace the authority and affection of parents. Sending someone to school does not prevent child abuse in general — Andrew4Handel
You can't just restrict a naturally unrestricted right in abstract. — Pseudonym
On the contrary, I think sending children to school very often actually constitutes child abuse. — Pseudonym
You keep alluding to, but never quite describing, exactly what considerations you think people should be taking into account (outweighing their spontaneous desire to have children) and what threshold they should meet before concluding that they are morally right to do so. — Pseudonym
I don't know what you mean. Homosexuality is natural but it has been heavily restricted and forced underground and punished with prison and death. — Andrew4Handel
The government can intervene to enforce a right but in general a right means someone is allowed to do X unrestricted. — Andrew4Handel
I am looking for an explanation of why people feel and act entitled to have a child. You don't need legal rights for someone to exhibit a sense of entitlement. — Andrew4Handel
How do suggest we allow all children a reasonable education? — Andrew4Handel
I could give a large list but here are a few. — Andrew4Handel
I didn't just ask for the considerations, I asked specifically for the thresholds.(..). So how do you know people haven't already considered these issues and decided they meet said threshold? — Pseudonym
So I want to know
Why thought it, necessary, morally acceptable, why they thought this was a good world to bring a child into and so on. — Andrew4Handel
There are already some thresholds upon which governments or societies deem people to be unfit to have access to children. — Andrew4Handel
Handel, Schubert — Andrew4Handel
It is ironic that serial killers in America were allowed to marry in prison whilst gay people were not allowed to marry at all.
I think this reflects on the warped values in this area. Marriage is for children and serial killers — Andrew4Handel
You sound a bit unhinged when you make statements like "marriage is for children and serial killers". A free rhetorical tip: don't go off the deep end too often. — Bitter Crank
If the government does not take your child away (or prevent you from having them) then it seems a reasonable presumption that you've met the thresholds society thinks are appropriate to bring a child into the world. — Pseudonym
Handel and Schubert may have been childless, but J. S. Bach fathered and supported 20 children plus turning out a massive amount of music (and he was Lutheran, not Catholic). — Bitter Crank
I don't personally support anyone having children. — Andrew4Handel
I find it hard to justify making children. The original post was asking why people feel justified in making children. I was hoping someone would try and persuade me why it is ethical, desirable or a right to have [a] child. — Andrew4Handel
I was hoping someone would try and persuade me why it is ethical, desirable or a right to have child. — Andrew4Handel
What is it that you measure the 'rightness' of an action by? — Pseudonym
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