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05-26-2010, 04:38 PM
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I mean, how do you even want the child to grow up? Like a happy, regular Japanese kid in your town or an unhappy, complaining "foreign" kid just like you? If your kid grows up to be like you, s/he is going to have nothing but problems at school, too, which is funny when the daddy or mommy is a school teacher. S/He is not going like what is taught there. No schools in Japan teach kids to be good Texans. It would be extremely tough for the kid to have to live by those double standards. |
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05-27-2010, 03:17 AM
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I would say I like more about Japan than I do about the United States, in general. So you're suggesting that shouldn't raise a child in the US because there are parts of American "culture" I don't like? There's no Tsuwabukistan where everything is as I would like it. By your logic I could never have a child anywhere if there are a few things I don't like about that place. That's pretty ridiculous. Quote:
Quite the opposite, I spend a lot of time telling my friends how much they're missing! I've even convinced a few to come visit. I don't have "nothing but problems" in my daily life. What I mentioned elsewhere are really very minor inconveniences. That was the whole point of the thread. In the last few years I have had exactly six "bad" days. I spend most of my day cheerful and content. I am, however, quite cerebral, and I like a good discussion. There is no need to "presume facts not in evidence" about my state of mind. Quote:
What exactly is a "good Texan?" Is it a good "Vidoran" or a good "Austinite?" Because I can assure you those two Texans may agree on how awesome Texas is, and will disagree on just about everything else. You think someone from Odessa is going to have the same view of morality as someone from Montross, Houston? Or that an African-American from Fifth Ward is going to have the same political beliefs as a Mexican-American from Brownsville or a Caucasian-American from Ft. Davis? If I were you, I would ask more questions. Your assumptions about a variety of topics seem uninformed. |
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07-21-2010, 11:54 AM
It is interesting to read about adoption in JAPAn usually being within the family.
I wonder if that is the NORM. Adoption is a very big issue indeed and not to be taken on lightly. The child should always be the first consideration above anything else. One has to ask oneself WHY one wants to adopt a child? I know many adoptees and birth mothers who have many problems what about fostering a child that needs a loving home> DO the Japanese have a fostering system for children who have not parents or parents cannot care for themselves. One has to think seriously of WHY? is it for the adopters benefit or the childs? |
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07-21-2010, 05:40 PM
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07-21-2010, 05:56 PM
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