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In reply to the discussion: Should a baby conceived by in vitro after father's death be eligible for SSI? [View all]Drahthaardogs
(6,843 posts)40. Personally,
I agree. I just don't think Social Security was created for this type of scenario. I am a little tired of paying for people's selfish choices. Much like the woman who refused to purchase health insurance, went bankrupt, and still advocates for not purchasing health insurance. Shit like this gets old.
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Should a baby conceived by in vitro after father's death be eligible for SSI? [View all]
Amaril
Mar 2012
OP
If the intent of SSI is to assist the remaining parent with the care of children who
GreenPartyVoter
Mar 2012
#2
I think it would set a bad precedent to designate an embryo as equivalent to a person.
pnwmom
Mar 2012
#19
I suffered from a case of sarcasm....my apologies......it happens when I see ridiculousness....
Jello Biafra
Mar 2012
#97
I think it's inconsiderate to the child, to be conceived after the father's death.
Quantess
Mar 2012
#16
There is a significant difference. If a man uses in vitro while he is alive, there is
pnwmom
Mar 2012
#20
Who knows? My SIL purposely got pregnant with no job, no home, and no degree.
Snake Alchemist
Mar 2012
#63
Isn't it equally valid to ask why these twins are less deserving than other children
onenote
Mar 2012
#87
A point from Justice Ginsburg: what would happen with adopted children?
muriel_volestrangler
Mar 2012
#42
Why isn't it also a slippery slope to give SSI benefits to a child born after the father dies
onenote
Mar 2012
#76
Depends! - Does the right wing perception that the egg or sperm is a person play into the decision?
liberal N proud
Mar 2012
#49
This is becoming a new rw Cadillac Welfare Queen meme for attacking social security.
Warren Stupidity
Mar 2012
#50
If we give the same legal status to a vial of sperm as to the child of the man who was born before
pnwmom
Mar 2012
#58
He may have planned for it....but he didn't participate in it at the time it occurred....
cbdo2007
Mar 2012
#53
It would seem that logic would still set you onto a slippery slope. You are granting rights at
TheKentuckian
Mar 2012
#94
What it would do is undermine the whole system of contraception and abortion case law,
pnwmom
Mar 2012
#74
The child didn't exist at the time of your husband's death -- only the potential for a child,
pnwmom
Mar 2012
#84
Yes, you are. At the time of your husband's death, that is what survived him.
Ikonoklast
Mar 2012
#98
why doesn't giving benefits to a child who is born after the parent dies do the same thing?
onenote
Mar 2012
#81
But we are talking about current law, not a law that Congress could possibly write in the future.
pnwmom
Mar 2012
#86
And that has been used as an anti-abortion argument. I think the argument would be much stronger
pnwmom
Mar 2012
#89
By that reasoning you are supporting an anti-abortion argument if you concede that a child that was
onenote
Mar 2012
#91
I think there is a good legal argument for having a child who was conceived before the death
pnwmom
Mar 2012
#92
Then you should certainly be concerned about Capatu's interpretation of the social security law
pnwmom
Mar 2012
#96
Is there going to be a statute of limitations on this or can you wait 10 or 15 years and then
Snake Alchemist
Mar 2012
#66
Also, if you conceived via a sperm bank, but then found out the father had died would your child be
Snake Alchemist
Mar 2012
#70
So if you conceived via a a sperm bank you should be able to pursue child support.
Snake Alchemist
Mar 2012
#101
Could get expensive for one guy if he had 100's, 1000's, 10,000's, of kids. nt
Snake Alchemist
Mar 2012
#103