| ▲ | BeetleB 3 hours ago | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
> This is not the kind of design we're discussing here It certainly seems to be. > "not having children" is usually a privileged, informed decision which most people are not in a position to make. As I said - barring some violent circumstances, having a child, or at least the actions leading up to it, is a decision one makes. > It's certainly very far from "designing your career". This thread is not about designing one's career, but designing one's life. See the top level comment. > Regardless, a lot of people don't have much choice here either, through a system conspiring on denying them choices (see: anti-abortion and anti-sex education lobbies, a health care system that conspires against their free time and energy, etc). I've yet to meet someone who is not underage and doesn't understand that having kids is a consequence. Sure, poor education and lack of abortion play a role, but none of that negates the fact that the person had a choice. It's exceptionally insulting to those who made different choices that led to positive outcomes to be told that people just like them in the same circumstances didn't have a choice. Sorry, but your stance is very much coming across as privileged, who is trying to sympathize with people you don't understand. It's a very different perspective when you actually come from the background you're claiming didn't have a choice. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| ▲ | the_af 2 hours ago | parent [-] | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
> As I said - barring some violent circumstances, having a child, or at least the actions leading up to it, is a decision one makes. This is simply a falsehood you believe. Or rather, it's a very constrained, mostly unfree "choice", with a lot of pressure from society telling them it's the wrong choice to make, barring them from access to abortion, contraception, and in many cases decent access to health and education. In many cases they are not even aware the choice existed, because it was concealed from them. I'm not sure if you are even aware a lot of people are not sure how babies come to be. It's easy to claim everyone has access to these choices when you are, well, privileged. > Sure, poor education and lack of abortion play a role, but none of that negates the fact that the person had a choice. It absolutely negates it. > It's exceptionally insulting to those who made different choices that led to positive outcomes to be told that people just like them in the same circumstances didn't have a choice. Statistically, very few do. The odds are stacked against them. So it's not insulting at all; what's insulting is claiming from a privileged position that they "had a choice". > Sorry, but your stance is very much coming across as privileged Nope. > It's a very different perspective when you actually come from the background you're claiming didn't have a choice. Let me guess: your family was starving and dirt poor, your siblings were all addicts, but you managed to overcome this, educate yourself, and raise yourself to entrepreneurship. Is this where this is going? | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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