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This is a series of article which
have to deal with what is happening to families
across the United States. CPS agencies are using
adoption to Get Paid!
This is not my article but I am creating an
awareness for everyone to see that Child
Protective services gets paid one in two ways.
This is the main way. Thanks, Karissa Anne
Lowell
The Adoption Industry
WHAT Industry? | BIG BUSINESS: $1.4
Billion | Adoption Affects Millions | CONSUMER
DEMAND | The Industry Admits COERCION | Today's
"Modus Operandi" WHAT Industry?
Like
any other industry, adoption is fueled by consumer
demand. In this case, the demand of infertile
couples to obtain other women's children, and who
are often willing to pay from $25,000 to $50,000
for that child.
BIG BUSINESS:
Adoption Services Valued At $1.4 Billion
Report by Nancy Ashe Copyright © 2001
About.com, Inc.
"An industry analysis of
Fertility Clinics and Adoption Services by
Marketdata Enterprises of Tampa, FL, has placed a
$1.4 billion value on adoption services in the US,
with a projected annual growth rate of 11.5% to
2004. According to a report from PR Newswire, this
is the only analysis of this business sector ever
undertaken.
Some details:
In 1999,
there were 138,000 US adoptions; There are
4,500 adoption services providers in the US, which
include 2,000 public agencies, 2,000 private
agencies, and 500 adoption attorneys; The
number of attorneys involved in adoption has
doubled over the past 10 years; Gross income
for small agencies can come to $400,000 per year,
and $10+ million for large agencies. Much of
the present and future growth is attributable to
the rise in international adoptions.
Marketdata's analysis places adoption costs
between $15,000 - $30,000, and describes adoption
as 'complex, and stories of unscrupulous operators
abound in this loosely regulated field.' "
From "About.Com: About Adoption" Reprinted
with Permission of Author
Adoption
Affects Millions
There are approximately 6
million adoptees in the United States. We can
extrapolate that there are usually 4 sets of
parents involved in each adoption (two natural
parents and two dopters). This increases the
number to 24 million people involved in Adoption.
Add siblings, stepparents, facilitators,
grandparents, aunts, uncles, and it is not
illogical to conclude that there are over 100
million people in the United States involved in
Adoption.
There are costs involved in the
original adoption - usually fees paid by adopters
to a "third party" who acts as a broker. Examples
of some fees are:
Religious Agencies: A
few hundred dollars to $10,000.00 or more
Non-denominational Private Agencies: $10,000
to $20,000 Independent [Private] Adoption: A
few thousand dollars to $50,000 but may be higher
if there are extremely high medical bills.
Public Agencies: None to minimal. There may be
attorney fees to finalize the adoption
International Adoption: $5,000 -$20,000 to the
agency plus transportation and lodging fees.
This is why there are entrepreneurs who make
their livelihood convincing young parents to
relinquish their babies - it is a profitable
business. These "baby brokers" include: adoption
lawyers maternity homes (often operated by
charities and churches) "facilitators" government
social workers commercial and "non-profit"
agencies
Consumer Demand
Like
all industries, the adoption industry is driven by
consumer demand. This demand was recognized as far
back as 1953:
"... the tendency growing
out of the demand for babies is to regard
unmarried mothers as breeding machines...(by
people intent) upon securing babies for quick
adoptions." - Leontine Young, "Is Money Our
Trouble?" (paper presented at the National
Conference of Social Workers, Cleveland, 1953)
{quote courtesy of Karen WB}
". . . babies
born out of wedlock [are] no longer considered a
social problem . . . white, physically healthy
babies are considered by many to be a social boon
. . . " (i.e. a valuable commodity..). - Social
Work and Social Problems (1964), National
Association of Social Workers. {quote courtesy of
Karen WB}
" Because there are many more
married couples wanting to adopt newborn white
babies than there are babies, it may almost be
said that they, rather than out of wedlock babies,
are a social problem. (Sometimes social workers in
adoption agencies have facetiously suggested
setting up social provisions for more 'baby
breeding.')" - Social Work and Social Problems
(1964), National Association of Social Workers.
{quote courtesy of Karen WB}
The
Industry Admits Coercion:
When unmarried
motherhood was considered shameful to the family,
it was easy to convince parents to ship their
unwed daughter to maternity homes (assuming that
marriage had been ruled out) and adoption lawyers:
"Parents embraced the idea of maternity
homes partly because in the postwar decades,
parents themselves needed protection as much as
their erring daughters... If the girl disappeared,
the problem disappeared with her." - Rickie
Solinger, "Wake Up Little Suzie."
Pressure
from society, churches, parents, maternity homes,
hospitals etc. - plus the virtual non-existance of
welfare for young single mothers - virtually
guaranteed that a young woman raised to respect
authority would surrender her baby. As well,
social workers were convinced that unwed equalled
unfit, that that they were doing their moral duty
in convincing (forcing/coercing) young women to
surrender:
" Unwed mothers should be
punished and they should be punished by taking
their children away." - Dr. Marion Hilliard of
Women's College Hospital, Toronto. Daily Telegraph
(November 1956) {quote courtesy of Karen WB}
" The fact that social work professional
attitudes tend to favor the relinquishment of the
baby, as the literature shows, should be faced
more clearly. Perhaps if it were recognized,
workers would be in less conflict and would
therefore feel less guilty about their "failures"
(the kept cases)." - Social worker Barbara Hansen
Costigan, in her dissertation, "The Unmarried
Mother--Her Decision Regarding Adoption" (1964)
{quote courtesy of Karen WB}
" The
caseworker must then be decisive, firm and
unswerving in her pursuit of a healthy solution
for the girl's problem. The "I'm going to help you
by standing by while you work it through" approach
will not do. What is expected from the worker is
precisely what the child expected but did not get
from her parents--a decisive "No!" .... An
ambivalent mother, interfering with her daughter's
ability ... to surrender her child, must be dealt
with as though she (the girl's mother) were a
child herself." - Marcel Heiman, M.D. in
"Out-Of-Wedlock Pregnancy In Adolescence,"
Casework Papers 1960. {quote courtesy of Karen WB}
Governments had (and still do have) their
own incentive for encouraging the adoption
industry. Every baby surrendered by an unemployed
unsupported single mother means one less welfare
recipient. An example: if a single parent is
eligible for welfare until their child was 7 years
old, a government saves $35,000 (7 x $5,000
annually) in welfare payments each time its social
workers obtain a surrender. Federal governments
also encourage adoption by providing cash bonuses
to states for every adoption completed.
"To the Province generally the great
advantage and economy of the Adoption Act can be
realized when it is stated that many of the
children before their adoption were costing five
and six dollars a week for maintenance." - 35th
Report of the Superintendent of Neglected and
Dependent Children (Ontario, 1928)
Today's Modus Operandi
As
divorce rates rose in the 70's and 80's, single
parenthood lost its stigma, women no longer
experienced the same societal/family pressure to
surrender, and the number of babies surrendered in
the U.S. and Canada began falling. Consumer demand
has, if anything, risen dramatically, as women who
have postponed children for careers are now
finding themselves infertile (see the April 15,
2002 Time magazine article "Making Time for a
Baby"). According to Adoptive Families magazine,
"For every healthy newborn available, there are
now almost forty potential parents searching."
("Love for Sale," Adoptive Families).
With
money to be made from desperate "Family Builders,"
the industry has had to come up with new ways of
obtaining its commodities. They have done this
through modern marketing and advertising tactics.
Adoptive parents have now formed "consumer
groups." Pressure from these consumer groups on
government has led to laws changing to vastly
decrease the time period in which a woman can
revoke her surrender or consent to adoption.
Adoption lawyers are promoting the legal idea
that, if a child is placed in an adoptive home
even before the adoption in consented to, the
adopters have the right to retain that child
against any challenge from the natural parents
(see the "Children's Rights" page by the American
Academy of Adoption Attorneys). The Internet
has increasing numbers of websites set up to
encourage women to "place" their children.
Agencies and lawyers fund these websites by
purchasing advertising space on them.
"Adoption was created to provide homes for
orphans. These by definition are children without
parents. Car crashes, war, natural disasters. It
was never created to provide children to 'poor
infertile couples'. When did the wires get
crossed? I guess when someone started making
money. Children are not a commodity!!!! Get a
puppy." - An adoptee "Follow the money" -
Deep Throat
What to read more
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