http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2014/06/1 ... ostpopular
I know it's Texas, but wtf?
SciFi Chick wrote:I would say, why did they risk going to Texas to do this, but it's where their family is, and they have friends that have successfully done this in Texas, so the fact that it's down to the whim of the judge is very disturbing.
And the fact that neither of them are at least on the respective birth certificate of their biological child is incredibly disturbing.
SciFiFisher wrote:SciFi Chick wrote:I would say, why did they risk going to Texas to do this, but it's where their family is, and they have friends that have successfully done this in Texas, so the fact that it's down to the whim of the judge is very disturbing.
And the fact that neither of them are at least on the respective birth certificate of their biological child is incredibly disturbing.
I want more information. For example, did Texas explicitly ban them being on the certificate? I understand that Texas says no you can't have two fathers on the certificate. But, why wasn't each primary father on the respective certificate? Because in this day and age all you have to do is be at the hospital and have the mother say you are the father. As long as you sign a statement saying "yes, that's my baby" they put you on the certificate.
SciFiFisher wrote:
I want more information. For example, did Texas explicitly ban them being on the certificate? I understand that Texas says no you can't have two fathers on the certificate. But, why wasn't each primary father on the respective certificate? Because in this day and age all you have to do is be at the hospital and have the mother say you are the father. As long as you sign a statement saying "yes, that's my baby" they put you on the certificate.
“As of right now in Texas two men cannot be on the birth certificate,” Jason Hanna explained in an interview with me on SiriusXM Progress. “So our attorney followed the letter of the law. We petitioned the court. We had DNA testing there [in court] and petitioned the judge to ultimately remove the surrogate mother from the birth certificate, who has no biological ties to the boys. We would like each biological dad to be placed on the birth certificate of our own son, and then ultimately proceed to the second-parent adoption. The entire petition was denied.”
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