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Snake Alchemist

(3,318 posts)
70. Also, if you conceived via a sperm bank, but then found out the father had died would your child be
Tue Mar 20, 2012, 01:04 PM
Mar 2012

eligible for survivor benefits?

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I would think she is on her own Politicalboi Mar 2012 #1
And that is wrong, on so many levels....... Amaril Mar 2012 #4
Thank you Politicalboi Mar 2012 #9
If the intent of SSI is to assist the remaining parent with the care of children who GreenPartyVoter Mar 2012 #2
What if they were already embryos at the time of his death? Amaril Mar 2012 #12
I think it would set a bad precedent to designate an embryo as equivalent to a person. pnwmom Mar 2012 #19
because an embryo isn't a human being yet.. snooper2 Mar 2012 #56
No way. She made the decision to have the twins after her husband was gone. badtoworse Mar 2012 #3
Not factual, they planned kids together. FogerRox Mar 2012 #6
What difference does that make? badtoworse Mar 2012 #8
There is no proof of that. He stored the sperm when there was still hope pnwmom Mar 2012 #23
such judgement and misinformation KJsMom Mar 2012 #65
I am very sorry for your loss. But, as terrible as that loss has been for you, pnwmom Mar 2012 #72
Put the SS benefits aside, we agree. FogerRox Mar 2012 #104
Actually, per the article....... Amaril Mar 2012 #11
In the case of the deceased making provisions in a will,... badtoworse Mar 2012 #13
That's what she claims. How do you know it's true? pnwmom Mar 2012 #26
I think that once a person dies their frozen parts should be disposed of Marrah_G Mar 2012 #5
What about organ donation? hughee99 Mar 2012 #36
I'm sorry, I meant their reproductive parts Marrah_G Mar 2012 #77
If the rules say no then thats that FogerRox Mar 2012 #7
Maybe this is just me. I've had a child through in vitro woodsprite Mar 2012 #10
It will be perceived as cloudbase Mar 2012 #14
If you ask any of these Repuke's about it... Jello Biafra Mar 2012 #15
So are you accepting the Repubs argument that sperm and/or embryos pnwmom Mar 2012 #21
No I'm not....I think the whole thing is beyond ridiculous...... Jello Biafra Mar 2012 #47
I don't understand then why you said, "Yes, she's entitled." pnwmom Mar 2012 #54
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
I think your comment is incredibly ill informed and judgemental KJsMom Mar 2012 #80
First of all, SSI has NOTHING to do with paternity. mysuzuki2 Mar 2012 #17
There is a significant difference. If a man uses in vitro while he is alive, there is pnwmom Mar 2012 #20
Sorry, but I disagree. DNA is DNA. mysuzuki2 Mar 2012 #28
The right-to-lifers and the anti-contraception people agree with you. pnwmom Mar 2012 #29
Suppose the man had donated his DNA-laden sperm to a sperm bank. pnwmom Mar 2012 #41
I think you ared creating false equivalencies here. mysuzuki2 Mar 2012 #45
How do you know he had any intention to have a baby created after his death? pnwmom Mar 2012 #46
Thank you, mysuzuki2 KJsMom Mar 2012 #79
I'm not gonna pretend I know the law OriginalGeek Mar 2012 #18
+1000 Mother Of Four Mar 2012 #22
Personally, Drahthaardogs Mar 2012 #40
"I am a little tired of paying for people's selfish choices." ScreamingMeemie Mar 2012 #57
Thank you! KJsMom Mar 2012 #69
Who says their needs won't be met? Would the woman have intentionally pnwmom Mar 2012 #43
Who knows? My SIL purposely got pregnant with no job, no home, and no degree. Snake Alchemist Mar 2012 #63
Any decision that said that sperm deposited before death pnwmom Mar 2012 #24
Will be even more interesting once cloning becomes possible. nt Snake Alchemist Mar 2012 #25
I've had personal experience with this. MoonchildCA Mar 2012 #27
Not true KJsMom Mar 2012 #83
Signature on a birth certificate would be proof. randome Mar 2012 #85
There are 3 signatures required on a CA birth certificate. MoonchildCA Mar 2012 #90
I'm gonna go with Yes. Iggo Mar 2012 #30
Does that mean you think that pnwmom Mar 2012 #31
What? Iggo Mar 2012 #32
There are lots of living, breathing children. badtoworse Mar 2012 #33
Yes there are. And who are these two children you think I'm thinking of? Iggo Mar 2012 #34
The twins who are the subject of the OP. Who else? pnwmom Mar 2012 #39
Isn't it equally valid to ask why these twins are less deserving than other children onenote Mar 2012 #87
All that existed at the time of his death was a vial of sperm. Not the twins. pnwmom Mar 2012 #37
Absolutely. Hatchling Mar 2012 #35
Why? Does the state give payments to all children who are born? pnwmom Mar 2012 #38
A point from Justice Ginsburg: what would happen with adopted children? muriel_volestrangler Mar 2012 #42
I'm amazed that so many people here don't see the slippery legal slope pnwmom Mar 2012 #44
Why isn't it also a slippery slope to give SSI benefits to a child born after the father dies onenote Mar 2012 #76
I have seen that very question used as an anti-abortion argument. pnwmom Mar 2012 #82
I get this is not the context, but the question arises quaker bill Mar 2012 #48
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
Even though you can biologically postdate parenthood, Vinca Mar 2012 #51
Great Big NO on This One RobinA Mar 2012 #52
Donate? She could sell it. pnwmom Mar 2012 #59
He may have planned for it....but he didn't participate in it at the time it occurred.... cbdo2007 Mar 2012 #53
Do you mean Social Security? That's SSA. randome Mar 2012 #55
"Planning to" is the operative phrase SoCalDem Mar 2012 #62
In a previous life, I worked for SSA. randome Mar 2012 #64
It would seem that logic would still set you onto a slippery slope. You are granting rights at TheKentuckian Mar 2012 #94
Mother of postumously conceived child KJsMom Mar 2012 #60
Good points. randome Mar 2012 #61
Thank you for posting. ceile Mar 2012 #67
Welcome to DU. William769 Mar 2012 #68
What it would do is undermine the whole system of contraception and abortion case law, pnwmom Mar 2012 #74
Wow KJsMom Mar 2012 #78
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
Again, under current law a child that was only a fetus when a parent died onenote Mar 2012 #88
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
Yikes! From a standpoint of protecting the right to choose onenote Mar 2012 #95
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
??! KJsMom Mar 2012 #71
These are issues that would come up. nt Snake Alchemist Mar 2012 #73
What if a man willed his vial of sperm to a friend? Or to a couple of friends? pnwmom Mar 2012 #75
They do not disclose the identity of the donors. n/t cynatnite Mar 2012 #100
I think the government is right to deny benefits. Ganja Ninja Mar 2012 #93
Absolutely, yes! cynatnite Mar 2012 #99
So if you conceived via a a sperm bank you should be able to pursue child support. Snake Alchemist Mar 2012 #101
Sperm banks as a practice do not disclose identities of their donors... cynatnite Mar 2012 #102
Could get expensive for one guy if he had 100's, 1000's, 10,000's, of kids. nt Snake Alchemist Mar 2012 #103
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