I talked to my boss when I first got hired about being pregnant and doing my job. It was a very physical job with long hours and could be quite dirty, but many women did it pregnant. He agreed with me that pregnancy was no hindurance to the job. For over a year I talked about becoming pregnant and he assured me it was okay. On the day I was supposed to fly out to meet the parents, he informed me that he would let me go if I went. I had my shift covered, everything was in line. I was dumb founded when he said that if I thought he was going to let me work there pregnant I was wrong. All that time he had been fine with it. So I prodded, trying to find out what changed his mind. His wife even did the same job while she was pregnant with their son! His response was "but she didn't sell the baby." He wouldn't let me explain, talk to him, or show him why he was wrong. He just told me to leave. I loved working there until that day and no amount of money could have brought me back after that. Selling my baby?? So far from the truth!

Based leftist boss fighting against human trafficking?? :so-true:

I mean, I gotta admit, like if someone's boss found out they were involved in selling children off to Little St. James and fired them, and I doubt anyone would fault them for it. And based on the thread we had the other day, it seems like a lot of this site believes that surrogacy is "literally buying babies" or equivalent to Murray Rothbard's "free market for infants" - or at least, a bunch of you think that's a reasonable position to have. So I'm curious if any of the 50 or so people who upbeared that thread see any problem with that boss's decision to fire his pregant worker for, as you would agree, "selling her baby." I'm curious to know if you'd make the same decision in his shoes, and if you see any problem with that situation - other than of course, that he couldn't hand her over to the cops as well.

I guess I'm just trying to better understand your positions. Like, is this something that you actually believe, or is it a superficial, exaggerated rhetorical flourish that you know is bullshit but use anyway because it provides a pretext for infringing on women's rights? You know, like "abortion is murder?"

I also wouldn't mind hearing from some centrists and moderates on the issue. Those who think both sides have a point, between, "Surrogate mothers are engaging in human trafficking by returning a child to their biological parent," and, "Surrogate mothers have a right to bodily autonomy." Is there one side that you think is more reasonable, or are you a true centrist, right in the middle of those two, equally extreme positions?

While I'm at it, I'd also like to open up the discussion more broadly. Is there anything else women's bodies do that you think is immoral, or maybe just plain gross? Anything else you think ought to be illegal? I'm really looking to hear from some men here, because I feel like we never get their perspective on that.

Anti-surrogacy is just anti-choice for anti-natalists. 
  • Llituro [he/him, they/them]
    ·
    edit-2
    2 years ago
    1. Rich people having "their own children" via surrogacy is a pretty fucked relationship when you consider patriarchal and capitalist context.

    2. Being in a situation where you're commoditizing your body in such an intimate way is usually going to be pretty fraught when it's a transactional relationship.

    3. People have been carrying kids for other people one way or another for millennia, that seems fine as an equitable social practice.

    Therefore it seems like a good synthesis would be significant protections for the person acting as the carrier.

    • Zuzak [fae/faer, she/her]
      hexagon
      ·
      2 years ago

      To me, the question is whether there’s actual evidence that surrogate mothers need or want more legal protections. If those are the people that we’re trying to protect, then doesn’t it behoove us to listen to what they’re actually saying? Isn’t it reasonable to assume that people who have actually gone through the process know more about it that people who haven’t?

      (copied from another comment)

      • Llituro [he/him, they/them]
        ·
        edit-2
        2 years ago

        We're all terminally online internet socialists, most of us are not trying to do anything related to this. Now it seems in your post that you really don't like people equating surrogacy with selling a child or some other such nonsense. I don't agree with that notion either, it's just not that that's happening.

        But in terms of what people that are surrogate mothers think about it in general, is there somewhere in your post where you...have that? I mean, it would make sense to have protections that are based on the needs and experiences of surrogates but that doesn't mean the need is something that we should see as debatable. I think most posters here are sex worker positive but know that under capitalism it's terribly rife for abuse and harm. I see this as analogous. For example, shouldn't the mother in your example have legal protections for being able to work while pregnant? Shouldn't she have further protections that bind the people using her labor to being responsible in some way for what happens?

        I think I'm kind of bothered by the notion of the question. Does someone really have to be capable of imagining and articulating their deserved rights to have or deserve them?

        • Zuzak [fae/faer, she/her]
          hexagon
          ·
          edit-2
          2 years ago

          But in terms of what people that are surrogate mothers think about it in general, is there somewhere in your post where you…have that?

          Well, I linked to an AMA. In the other thread, I posted this study. It was the only link to any kind of actual data about surrogate mothers in the entire thread, and it was met with mockery and derision. I have been trying my best to read about and find information from people with direct experience, while not a single person on here who is anti-surrogacy has posted a single shred of evidence that anyone who has been involved in it wants it banned or more heavily regulated. It's purely their own assumptions, speculation, and vibes.

          I think I’m kind of bothered by the notion of the question. Does someone really have to be capable of imagining and articulating their deserved rights to have or deserve them?

          I'm kind of bothered by the notion that a bunch of online leftists with zero exposure to the actual practice and zero interest in learning about it think they know better and want to just barge in telling people, "No, you're oppressing yourself, you're too dumb to realize that you shouldn't be doing this, I know better than you what you actually need." It's an incredibly chauvinistic attitude.

          Historically, socialists have had all sorts of ideas about how society ought to operate. But the successful projects have been successful because they actually listened to the needs and wants of the people. Look at how Mao won over the farmers. Look at how Lenin promised "Peace, land, and bread" - none of which were novel concepts the Russian peasants had to be told to want. Look at how the EZLN pursued a more diplomatic path because it was what the people they're representing wanted them to do. Look at how the Black Panthers operated a free breakfast program.

          Step one of any leftist project should be to find out the actual material needs of the community in the present situation, and work from that. Not to just assume that you know better about what they need because you're better educated or whatever.

          • Llituro [he/him, they/them]
            ·
            2 years ago

            I’m kind of bothered by the notion that a bunch of online leftists with zero exposure to the actual practice and zero interest in learning about it think they know better and want to just barge in telling people, “No, you’re oppressing yourself, you’re too dumb to realize that you shouldn’t be doing this, I know better than you what you actually need.” It’s an incredibly chauvinistic attitude.

            Is that what you think I'm arguing though? You linked a study about their psychological well-being, but I at least am not really arguing about that. I'm not even arguing that surrogacy shouldn't exist. I'm arguing that capitalism is a fuck and it seems like you don't want to really engage with the material contradictions of surrogacy under capitalism on the grounds that "surrogates are actually fine with this particular form of inequality." Like...ok, maybe many are? I'm personally not trying to engage on the terms of a metanarrative of what other hexbear.net users are thinking about surrogacy. There are positives and negatives to a mass line as the only form of guidance on social progress. On the one hand, obviously Mao won over the farmers by hearing their issues and helping the farmers synthesize them. But on the other, that also requires the vanguardists to politically educate the farmers, which did happen. And still, we see social contradictions in these societies that are patriarchal in nature, like the lack of explicit rights and protections for LGBTQ+ people in China. So I don't think you can look at some imagined notion of a mass line when looking at something as relatively complex to our society as surrogacy. In other words, it's not really chauvinistic to identify the dynamics that lead to surrogacy being accomplished problematically, inherently, under capitalism, while recognizing that in general, it's very human as a practice. To reiterate, no one here is barging in anywhere, we're arguing online on a niche communist internet forum.

            • Zuzak [fae/faer, she/her]
              hexagon
              ·
              edit-2
              2 years ago

              I’m arguing that capitalism is a fuck and it seems like you don’t want to really engage with the material contradictions of surrogacy under capitalism on the grounds that “surrogates are actually fine with this particular form of inequality.”

              I'm perfectly willing to engage with it. Give me the facts. Show me the stats. Show me evidence that the actual material conditions line up with your thus far entirely hypothetical and theoretical ideas about what might possibly be happening on the ground. Otherwise, no, I'm not willing to engage with "the material contradictions of surrogacy under capitalism" on the grounds that you haven't presented the material contradictions, only the hypothetical contradictions which may or may not have anything whatsoever to do with the actual, material reality.

              And if you don't have sources for the material reality you believe exists - why not? Is it perhaps because you haven't looked into it, because you haven't thought too much about it before? Perfectly understandable! But if that's the case, then maybe start by reserving judgement, not jumping to any conclusions about how it must function, and instead try collecting data and learning about the situation, and only then thinking about how it might be improved. And hey, you know where you could learn about how it works? Maybe from the people actually involved in it.

              I reiterate that placing your own preconceived, purely theoretical notions about what other people's lives are like above their own testimony regarding the same is incredibly chauvinistic, and if you don't agree with that then no, I will not discuss this any further because I disagree you with you on a very fundamental level.

              • Llituro [he/him, they/them]
                ·
                2 years ago

                do you not understand that rich people renting poorer peoples bodies is inherently an unequal thing under capitalism? all i really have to say on the issue is my original comment, which is just this one point ultimately. i'm not involved with surrogacy, i'm not antisurrogacy. i'm not really trying to have a debate about why you're the final authority on surrogacy. is this personal for you or something? do you have personal experience with the process of surrogacy in america? because from my perspective, and i'm otherwise disengaging on your post because i really just wanted to offer the most obvious reason people here would be concerned about the manner in which surrogacy would be practiced in america, you are unwilling to understand this singular and obvious point. are you telling me you need hard data to understand that workers need protections from the people employing me? that you need a study to tell you that black kids in areas the panthers operated needed food, that the peasants in china needed to overthrow their landlords? you can't argue from this position of data on the one hand and an appeal to a notion of a mass line on the other if you're not going to back up that example with like, idk, some study that proves that the kids that the black panthers were feeding were hungry or some shit. i don't need a study to tell me that. your notion that people here are actually meaningfully against surrogacy is just much more theoretical than the notion that rich people that don't want to adopt and are willing to pay for surrogacy could take advantage of the surrogate. because it's an inherently unequal social relationship. because of the patriarchy and chauvinism that is inherent to our society.

                  • Llituro [he/him, they/them]
                    ·
                    edit-2
                    2 years ago

                    thanks for the bad faith discussion i guess, you're as equally unwilling to listen to an argument about why it would make sense to have protections for surrogates as whoever you're mad at from the other thread as they are to your arguments.

                      • Llituro [he/him, they/them]
                        ·
                        edit-2
                        2 years ago

                        “Surrogate mothers have a right to bodily autonomy.”

                        This is what you want people to agree with, right? I agree with this, I have been agreeing with this. So yes, bad faith does include when you make a point to a person and the response is "source? source? source? facts? sources?" especially when they already mostly agree with you. Do you not think that bodily autonomy should include some protections for poor people so they don't get fucked over? We have this protection for medical interactions, for interactions with all sorts of other critical roles and services within society, why does bodily autonomy not get protected like that?

                        edit: As socialists, our basic notion of wage labor is that we need protection from our bosses. Why don't surrogates deserve some form of established protections for the labor they're doing, how they're treated during it, that they have some say in how it goes. It seems like you just want the process to fuck over women who get unlucky with how the people paying for the surrogacy treat them.

                        • Zuzak [fae/faer, she/her]
                          hexagon
                          ·
                          edit-2
                          2 years ago

                          Yes, I do agree with that. I don't think anyone has disputed that surrogate mothers should be entitled to legal protections.

                          The reason I've been asking for sources and facts is because you led with "do you not understand that rich people renting poorer peoples bodies is inherently an unequal thing under capitalism?" and that is, again, a completely theoretical basis for whatever position you want to argue for, and without verifying whether or not it actually results in anything harmful - and if so, what specific harm it causes - it is completely impossible to have any kind of informed take on the matter.

                          I have gone back and read through your post and

                          that you need a study to tell you that black kids in areas the panthers operated needed food, that the peasants in china needed to overthrow their landlords? you can’t argue from this position of data on the one hand and an appeal to a notion of a mass line on the other if you’re not going to back up that example with like, idk, some study that proves that the kids that the black panthers were feeding were hungry or some shit

                          This is just an absolutely ridiculous thing to say, I'm sorry. The Black Panthers didn't need a fucking study to see that kids were going hungry because they could see the hungry kids right there on the street! Mao didn't need a study to see that the peasants needed to overthrow their landlords because he went out and actually lived with the peasants, and when he returned to the Communist party headquarters, his perspective on their potential for mobilization was written off and dismissed because the rest of the party believed, on a purely theoretical basis that it was the industrial workers who would lead the revolution. And when that completely failed to materialize, when the Communist party was defeated, left in shambles, and forced to endure the Long March, then Mao was finally able to start doing his materially grounded plan, which worked in spite of the fact that he was in a much, much weaker position than before the rest of the Communists were crushed.

                          Have you talked to surrogate mothers? Do you know any? No? Then maybe you could start by reading through that AMA.

                          This isn't even just about surrogacy. It's about how we treat people, how we handle information, how we respect and learn from the people we're trying to help instead of fucking White Knighting.

                          Christ.

                          • Llituro [he/him, they/them]
                            ·
                            2 years ago

                            i don't need a study to support surrogate mothers, i want them to have healthcare.

                            and without verifying whether or not it actually results in anything harmful - and if so, what specific harm it causes - it is completely impossible to have any kind of informed take on the matter.

                            ok, well i guess i'm built different, i don't need to actually read a fucking study or witness child labor to know it's wrong and exploitative. if you think that you can have that kind of class dynamic and it's magically without harm because you can't find a study for it, then you should probably think about how you treat people. i'm not white knighting. i'm doing nothing. i will continue to do nothing. how many times do i have to type that, it's not white knighting to recognize that a class divide will create material harm, it's basic human empathy. you're literally arguing from the perspective of libs while claiming it's materialism.

                            • Zuzak [fae/faer, she/her]
                              hexagon
                              ·
                              2 years ago

                              Materialism is when you base your beliefs on ideas without looking at the material world at all.

                              • Llituro [he/him, they/them]
                                ·
                                2 years ago

                                materialism is when you look at a class divide but the liberals haven't published a peer-reviewed study on how the beatings made the workers feel, so you can't have an empathetic take on it.

                                • Zuzak [fae/faer, she/her]
                                  hexagon
                                  ·
                                  2 years ago

                                  Materialism is when you see someone getting spanked and immediately rush in to save them while they insist it's consensual and demand you let them go but then you realize that, in order to have seen the situation you'd have to have observed the material world so you let them go in order to cover your eyes, and then imagine the whole situation happening again in your head.

                                  • Llituro [he/him, they/them]
                                    ·
                                    2 years ago

                                    I AGREE WITH YOU YOU DUMB ASSHOLE, WHY DO YOU STILL NEED TO ARGUE ABOUT IT??? WHY DO YOU WANT SURROGACY TO BE JUST AN UNREGULATED FREE-FOR-ALL THAT DOESN'T PROTECT WOMEN AT ALL???

                                    • Zuzak [fae/faer, she/her]
                                      hexagon
                                      ·
                                      edit-2
                                      2 years ago

                                      I don't and I never said that. I'm giving you shit because like I said, this isn't just about surrogacy. I expect a focus on evidence and testimony of vulnerable people to not only be respected, but to be actually practiced by more people on this website than myself. Yeah, we agree on the conclusion, but I disagree completely with you about the process of getting there, which is far more important than having a decent take on one specific issue.

                                      • Llituro [he/him, they/them]
                                        ·
                                        edit-2
                                        2 years ago

                                        I understand when I am and am not doing something with a material impact. We are on a website with 200 concurrent users. I'm a burnt out, overworked researcher. I know that I don't need to read a study when the class dynamics are this transparent. And do you know what happens when I'm wrong? I change my mind. You're giving me shit because you're angry more people haven't researched this and don't want to. I don't need to change my mind because I don't and won't have political power over surrogates. If it becomes an issue where I need research to point to people for them to believe me, that's when I look it up. I have yet to be in a situation where I couldn't find some. I center human beings empathetically as a moral center, and that has yet to steer me wrong in my understanding of the likely nature of abuses on the basis of class, race, ethnicity, gender, sexuality, etc. Now what are you going to say to the person that did actually have the bandwidth to go find some good evidence of surrogacy tourism? You gonna shit all over them too? I'm sorry people in your life need to have data to empathize with people who are vulnerable, but I've learned to empathize without that data.

                                        • Zuzak [fae/faer, she/her]
                                          hexagon
                                          ·
                                          2 years ago

                                          I totally respect not doing the research on in when you not doing something with a material impact. I do. I imagine that's most of the people on this site in regards to the topic. But in my opinion, in that case, it's better to just reserve judgement and stay out of the fray.

                                          I do apologize that I've been abrasive in this thread. As I've mentioned, I'm quite frustrated because, when I asked for sources previously, people attacked me without providing any, and when I found my own, and asked directly if they had any better sources that would refute what I found, I got more of the same. In this thread, you've weighed in to criticize my pursuit of information, and that caused me to get frustrated with you.

                                          Now, thankfully, I have finally, finally received what I originally asked for, which is some source, just any amount of evidence whatsoever so I can see if there is any truth to what the people I've been arguing with have been saying. I am certainly not going to shit on the one person to finally provide something to back up their claims, obviously. But I don't know how I'll respond yet because I'm still reading through them.

                                          I think, rather than "empathize," you mean "sympathize." I've been arguing for listening and learning from vulnerable people, not just feeling pity for them. Yes, I do need to collect data about what they express and how they feel in order to understand and empathize with them, because that's part of what empathy is, fundamentally.

                                          • Llituro [he/him, they/them]
                                            ·
                                            2 years ago

                                            I hope I can be clear that from my perspective, commenting on the class divisions at play and leaving it at that is what constitutes reserving judgment and staying out of it.

                                            I do apologize that I’ve been abrasive in this thread.

                                            Fair enough. I apologize for the same. I don't think you have come across as actually seeking further knowledge. Rather, you seemed to be attacking me rhetorically for not having a study or a testimony to specifically point at, which does constitute a bad faith form of argument. I realize you're heated because of some people saying unhinged shit in that other thread, but it really did not seem like you actually wanted some real examples, and I'm way too autistic to not just keep arguing a point on merits I think are reasonable.

                                            I think, rather than “empathize,” you mean “sympathize.” I’ve been arguing for listening and learning from vulnerable people, not just feeling pity for them.

                                            I think perhaps I mean something in between then, because you are correct that I am simply and fundamentally unable to empathize with them because I cannot experience surrogacy myself, but I also don't simply feel pity for them. My feeling toward the vulnerable is a sympathetic solidarity. It's the same as my feeling of solidarity with historical socialist projects, and with existing socialist projects.

                                            • Zuzak [fae/faer, she/her]
                                              hexagon
                                              ·
                                              2 years ago

                                              I hope I can be clear that from my perspective, commenting on the class divisions at play and leaving it at that is what constitutes reserving judgment and staying out of it.

                                              I do appreciate that, and I should've taken that into consideration more than I did. I singled you out for a broader trend of people weighing in with various takes without having anything to back it up - something that the format of the internet encourages, and which I find frustrating (especially in the context of women's rights) - but it was unfair considering that your take is very restrained. I'm sorry for that.

                  • GreenTeaRedFlag [any]
                    ·
                    2 years ago

                    Crunching numbers doesn't prove workers are exploited. You literally have to have a theoretical framework with which to understand the problem, and that's more important than a study at this stage.

                    • Zuzak [fae/faer, she/her]
                      hexagon
                      ·
                      edit-2
                      2 years ago

                      It kinda does though. There's plenty of facts and data that you can point to that leads to the conclusion of workers being exploited. People without a socialist, or even leftist theoretical framework, can still realize that workers are getting a raw deal. I'm not saying that a theoretical framework isn't important, but that theoretical framework should be derived from observations about the world, and routinely tested against observations and refined to better reflect reality.

                      • GreenTeaRedFlag [any]
                        ·
                        2 years ago

                        You already need an idea of what exploitation is, and what moral or social or political weight it has. People in the antebellum American south sometimes genuinely thought the enslaved Africans were benefiting from their labor, not being exploited, same can be said of many industrialists, and even fellow workers, in factories during the jndustrial revolution.

                        • Zuzak [fae/faer, she/her]
                          hexagon
                          ·
                          edit-2
                          2 years ago

                          Sometimes thought. Generally, because they were operating with an incorrect theoretical framework which came from propaganda, social pressure, and sometimes material interests, rather than from actual observations of the material world. People didn't see an enslaved person getting whipped and think, "Huh, I wonder whether that's helping or harming him, unfortunately, nobody told me what exploitation is so I guess I'll never know." They saw it, and it troubled them, but then they fell back into the brainworms they had carefully cultivated to make peace with it. It's not a case of lacking a theoretical framework, it's a case of the obvious and readily apparent truth being concealed by a deceptive and false theoretical framework.

                          In any case, what are you even arguing? That materialism is wrong? That socialism shouldn't be scientific? This isn't up for debate.

                          • GreenTeaRedFlag [any]
                            ·
                            2 years ago

                            What I'm arguing is that you need to already have an idea of what's right and wrong before making any moral judgement. The other person you were speaking with was making the case that exploitation would be bad, and you asked for evidence of exploitation, which missed the mark.

                            • Zuzak [fae/faer, she/her]
                              hexagon
                              ·
                              2 years ago

                              What I’m arguing is that you need to already have an idea of what’s right and wrong before making any moral judgement.

                              And I disagree with that. When slave traders packed enslaved people onto ships like sardines, knowing that many of them would die on the journey, they did not need some moral philosopher to come over and explain to them that what they were doing was morally wrong. They knew it was wrong, because the wrongness of it would be immediately obvious to any human being.

                              The other person you were speaking with was making the case that exploitation would be bad, and you asked for evidence of exploitation, which missed the mark.

                              What policies you support should not be based purely on hypothetical imaginings. That's like chuds on Twitter being like, "Oh no, what if the chatbot needs to defuse a bomb and the password is a racial slur?" If it's not a real situation that actually happens, then it doesn't really matter.

                              Nobody is arguing against the idea that, if exploitation is happening, that's bad. Obviously, that's a given. If that's all they're saying, then what they're saying is irrelevant to what should be done. "If this policy causes the the earth to explode, that would be a bad policy" is true of every policy but contributes nothing to the discussion.

                              • GreenTeaRedFlag [any]
                                ·
                                2 years ago

                                They knew it was wrong, because the wrongness of it would be immediately obvious to any human being.

                                No. You do need an ideological framework for right and wrong. That's why you saw such debate at the time and into today about whether it was right or wrong.

                                Anyway, the other person wasn't suggesting a particular policy, nor am I here, just a statement that you can't say it's blanket fine when it works out well for the majority of surrogates. I mean, wage labor has worked out fine for a lot of people, and we really want to change that on this website.

                                • Zuzak [fae/faer, she/her]
                                  hexagon
                                  ·
                                  2 years ago

                                  No. You do need an ideological framework for right and wrong. That’s why you saw such debate at the time and into today about whether it was right or wrong.

                                  No, that is incorrect. The reason that you saw a debate was because material interests incentivized the creation of false narratives and rationalizations meant to soothe people's consciences while they made shit tons of money. Your position on this is absurd and idealist.

                                  • GreenTeaRedFlag [any]
                                    ·
                                    2 years ago

                                    There is no material basis for "hurting people is bad." And saying people "just know" is stupid. They also just know the sun revolves around the earth and the stars are very small and their culture is better than other cultures. None of these things are true.

                                    • Zuzak [fae/faer, she/her]
                                      hexagon
                                      ·
                                      edit-2
                                      2 years ago

                                      Hurting others or seeing others get hurt is observably and obviously detrimental to psychological health.

                                      Lemme just ask, where the fuck do you think knowledge comes from? Do you astrally project to the plane of existence where platonic forms float around and bump into things until you learn stuff?

                                      I'm literally just describing how the scientific process works and for some reason you're making me argue it. All of those incorrect ideas you mentioned were corrected because they were tested against material observations and changed to better reflect reality. This is such a ridiculous conversation.

                                      • GreenTeaRedFlag [any]
                                        ·
                                        2 years ago

                                        If I got a massive psychological health boost from hurting others, would that make it okay? Are the actions of psychopaths who don't feel remorse always justified because if this? At a certain point you do have to turn inward and ask what is good and why. And that's not science, that's philosophy. I try not to hurt others because I think it's wrong to hurt others, even if doing so would bring me pleasure or any other benefit. This is because I accept as an axiom that hurting others is wrong. With that done, then science can come in to determine what I should do about that, but not before. Science is dependent on you agreeing the world exists and works in regularly established patterns, which isn't true as a given. You have to assume those axioms first. So when the initial point was raised, "if exploitation was going on that would be bad," badgering for proof of exploitation missed the point of that argument.

                                        • Zuzak [fae/faer, she/her]
                                          hexagon
                                          ·
                                          2 years ago

                                          Again, the question "If there's exploitation going on, would it be bad?" was never something that was remotely in question.

                                          Hey, here's a quick question for you: what's the correct response to, "Assuming trans people actually are molesting children, would that be bad?" Is it, "Yes, that would be bad," or is it, "It doesn't matter because it's not happening, and also fuck you?" Should we allow the conversation about trans rights to be dominated by hypothetical speculation, or should we insist on grounding it in actual facts? Like what other topics do you wanna try your bullshit approach on?

  • eatmyass
    ·
    edit-2
    1 year ago

    deleted by creator

    • Zuzak [fae/faer, she/her]
      hexagon
      ·
      2 years ago

      To me, the question is whether there's actual evidence that surrogate mothers need or want more legal protections. If those are the people that we're trying to protect, then doesn't it behoove us to listen to what they're actually saying? Isn't it reasonable to assume that people who have actually gone through the process know more about it that people who haven't?

      • eatmyass
        ·
        edit-2
        1 year ago

        deleted by creator

        • Zuzak [fae/faer, she/her]
          hexagon
          ·
          edit-2
          2 years ago

          I think that's reasonable. But yeah generally I think that the approach of like, "This is exploitative so we need to ban it" is a bad approach, because it's not focused on looking at why people are in a potentially vulnerable position to start with, but instead on taking away options from vulnerable people just because we think an option is... icky? Uncouth? Generally, letting people have options is better than taking them away, unless there's a good reason, like, the option is a trap and most people who choose it wish they hadn't, or, it's not actually voluntary and it's availability means people will be forced into it (as can happen with sex work). When we look at the actual material reality, neither of those is the case in this situation. Taking some precautions to ensure it doesn't become predatory is one thing, but outright banning it, not because it's actually predatory or harming anyone, but because you personally don't like the vibe of it, or you have some purely idealist speculation about how it could theoretically become predatory, is a completely absurd proposition.

          • eatmyass
            ·
            edit-2
            1 year ago

            deleted by creator

            • Zuzak [fae/faer, she/her]
              hexagon
              ·
              2 years ago

              What zero materialism does to mfers.

              Relying purely on vibes and intuition while being immersed in a patriarchal culture is naturally going to lead people to take a heavier hand than necessary when dealing with women doing things outside of the norm. I'm just disappointed to see this BS on the communist bear site.

    • MoneyIsTheDeepState [comrade/them,he/him]
      ·
      2 years ago

      Your comment made me curious what pregnancy and childbirth care costs in Cuba, and jfc are my Google search results about Cuba unhinged

      It seems like it's free and good, as referenced by this study, but I don't have the patience to sift through more smear articles than I just did. The smears I skimmed didn't claim that it's expensive though, they just tried to make Cuba's pregnancy care centers sound like concentration camps

  • Dryad [she/her]
    ·
    2 years ago

    Any person who comments on this blatant struggle session attempt is a filthy drama piggy, myself included.

    • Llituro [he/him, they/them]
      ·
      2 years ago

      i just wanted to argue that maybe this should involve free healthcare and paying for womb space seems kinda weird when humans have been doing that as part of the social fabric for eternity without financial compensation in the form of currency, but yeah, i guess i am just a filthy drama piggy after all :deeper-sadness:

  • RNAi [he/him]
    ·
    2 years ago

    I don't have a strong opinion but that's the most convoluted strawman I ever saw.

        • Zuzak [fae/faer, she/her]
          hexagon
          ·
          2 years ago

          Yeah, which part?

          1. It's perfectly reasonable to fire someone because they spend their free time buying and/or selling children.

          2. Surrogacy is the buying and selling of children

          3. Therefore, it is perfectly reasonable to fire someone for choosing to become a surrogate mother.

          Seems like a pretty logical conclusion to draw, provided you agree with 2, which is what they claim.

          • RNAi [he/him]
            ·
            2 years ago

            I don't think surrogacy is selling children.

            Surrogacy to me is yet another example of thing that, if it's transactional, can become fucked up real quick given the current system. People should be able to do it if they want, but it becomes fucked up when somebody is forced by conditions to do it.

            I guess being pregnant and giving birth is like a big psychological deal for the person doing it, so that's why I don't vibe with rich reptiles paying desperate people to ¿host? (idk what's the correct term) their embryos. Sure, those same reptiles will pay to other desperate people to raise their born children, etc.

            I just don't want to cheerlead a new kind of exploitation. Sure, exploitation is everywhere, etc.

            Similar to prostitution, not legalizing, and so not regulating, transactional surrogacies can lead to "precarization" of the situation for the people forced to do it. Even worse if complete ban.

            Idk

            • Zuzak [fae/faer, she/her]
              hexagon
              ·
              2 years ago

              I don’t think surrogacy is selling children.

              Then you're not someone who the story about the boss was directed at. There were people on here going around saying that and getting upvoted and it is a completly absurd, infuriatingly incorrect description of the situation. I presented the example that I did in order to crush that line into the dirt and to bully the people saying that shit into understanding that it's completely unacceptable. It's not really a strawman if people are literally saying that exact thing, it's just a criticism of a more extreme position than what you personally believe.

              People should be able to do it if they want, but it becomes fucked up when somebody is forced by conditions to do it.

              The question I have is, are people actually being forced into it? I have seen some stories regarding people in developing countries being taken advantage of, and that has caused me to back off in that specific context. But I have still not seen any evidence that surrogate mothers in the west are being forced into or taken advantage of. I'm of the mind-set that if I'm going to tell someone that they shouldn't be allowed to do something that they want to do, then I should have something that I can point at, and that something should be real, material evidence and not just speculation and hypotheticals, which is what the majority of people on here are basing their takes on.

              • RNAi [he/him]
                ·
                2 years ago

                I have seen some stories regarding people in developing countries being taken advantage of,

                Same, but I live in such country. The thing about those situations is that not only a US dollar is worth a lot more in peripheral countries, but also the people from the imperial core become shielded against any kind of legal demand from the surrogate mother cuz :us-foreign-policy:.

                But you are not shielded against possible exploitation either. If surrogacy is fully legalized and regulated (to the favor of rich people of course) in the imperial core, instead of going thru the hassle of travelling to the third world, rich people will be able to exploit desperate people at home.

                Again, the whole thing seems exactly the same as prostitution discourse.

                • Zuzak [fae/faer, she/her]
                  hexagon
                  ·
                  2 years ago

                  In which case, again, I'm inclined to base my opinions on how the people actually involved feel about it and what they think should be done - something which hardly anyone on this site seems remotely interested in doing. Just takes, takes, and more takes.

  • Outdoor_Catgirl [she/her, they/them]
    ·
    2 years ago

    I'd compare it to sex work discourse rather than abortion. You've got the "x is inherently unethical because power dynamics under capitalism and patriarchy" and the "women have bodily autonomy despite what you consider morally objectionable" arguments. Same shit.

    • Zuzak [fae/faer, she/her]
      hexagon
      ·
      2 years ago

      I agree, and just like with sex work discourse, nobody gives a shit what the people actually involved think should happen.

      • berrytopylus [she/her,they/them]
        ·
        edit-2
        2 years ago

        Well part of the struggle is that "people involved" is a pretty damn big category. The sex worker who gets into selling nudes for extra spending money, someone who just likes sex selling their body for some fun with selective clientele, a drug addict who is exploited by a lack of proper healthcare, persecution, and being abused by a pimp and a trafficked woman in a third world country kidnapped off the street are going to have insanely different perspectives on sex work and the morals behind it.

        In the same way, surrogacy is drastically different between an otherwise well off woman just making some extra spending cash and a poor homeless third world woman trying not to starve.

  • Awoo [she/her]
    ·
    2 years ago

    Anti-surrogacy is just anti-choice for anti-natalists.

    I don't think this is accurate. Most people in the left have no problems with surrogacy, the issue only occurs when you introduce profit to it.

  • aaaaaaadjsf [he/him, comrade/them]
    ·
    edit-2
    2 years ago

    Critique about surrogacy is more about how women's wombs should not be for sale. Because what ends up happening is rich and high status people taking advantage of poor people, usually from much poorer countries, even going on "procreation vacations" and forcing them to have their child.

    Not sure what an ancient Reddit post has to do with it. Its nothing to do with anti natalism.

    Also as a bi man I really, really hate how surrogacy is seen as progressive and intertwined into LGBTQIA rights. It is not homophobic to say that we don't have the right to rent someone else's womb.

    • Zuzak [fae/faer, she/her]
      hexagon
      ·
      2 years ago

      Because what ends up happening is rich and high status people taking advantage of poor people, usually from much poorer countries, even going on “procreation vacations” and forcing them to have their child.

      Do you have resources where I can find out more about this?

      • aaaaaaadjsf [he/him, comrade/them]
        ·
        edit-2
        2 years ago

        Happens all the time in Ukraine, because of the way the laws are written (the surrogate mother does not appear on the birth certificate). The world's largest surrogacy clinics operate there and most "customers" are wealthier foreigners.

        https://www.theguardian.com/world/2020/jun/15/the-stranded-babies-of-kyiv-and-the-women-who-give-birth-for-money

        https://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-60824936

        https://www.financeuncovered.org/stories/surrogacy-law-reform-law-commission-cafcass-low-cost-surrogates-new-life-baby-broker

        • Zuzak [fae/faer, she/her]
          hexagon
          ·
          2 years ago

          Thanks a lot for providing that information.

          Some of the stories from Ukraine are heartwrenching, but being a warzone complicates things, it's a little hard to separate the harm caused by the practice compared to the more general tragedy. But I found the investigation in the third source more compelling. It definitely tracks with the sort of fly-by-night, sweatshop practices done by other multinationals in other fields.

          I think there's a valid case to be made regarding international surrogacy restrictions, especially in the context of overexploited countries, because in that context it's a lot easier for scum to get away with a lot more. But I'm not convinced regarding domestic surrogacy, in the imperial core. In that context, what I've seen has given me a completely different picture (this study, for example). The impression I've gotten is that most surrogate mothers in the US do so because it's something they want to do, often as a form of altruism, and it can be helpful and lifechanging for couples that can't have kids, for whatever reason.

          I tend to base my beliefs on actual consequences, and the line of "wombs should not be for sale," strikes me as, I mean, who gets to decide which body parts a woman is allowed to use to make a living, and on what basis is that decision made, if not material consequences? I'm not going to tell someone they're not allowed to host someone else's baby unless I can actually point to something and say, "See, this is the thing I'm trying to avoid, this is the reason behind this restriction." While you've made the case for that in certain contexts, I don't agree with your position universally.

  • RION [she/her]
    ·
    2 years ago

    This is probably flying close to the sun with the snark but I'm glad to see I'm not the only one who was put off by that thread

    • Zuzak [fae/faer, she/her]
      hexagon
      ·
      edit-2
      2 years ago

      I tried politely asking for sources and data, you know, regret rates for surrogate mothers and stuff like that. The only response I got was OP yelling at me that "iT's LiTeRaLlY bUyInG cHiLdReN," and when I looked into the material reality of it and found that very few surrogate mothers regret their decision or suffer any kind of long term consequences, and then posted that source, OP just continued yelling at me that "iT's LiTeRaLlY bUyInG cHiLdReN," and that's when I realized that nobody fucking cares about any of that nerd shit like actually listening to the people they claim to be protecting and it's all about slogans and framing and rhetoric and that's why the snark in this post is turned up to 11.

  • 666PeaceKeepaGirl [any, she/her]
    ·
    2 years ago

    Ok but like 70% of that Hexbear thread is just people complaining about living a society where it approaches being meaningful to ask what the price tag on the most intimate aspects of our lives are. Even the minority who explicitly are advocating a commercial ban are pretty clearly (a) premising their position on the fact that meaningful consent is impossible in a system of capitalist exploitation, and (b) clearly not advocating for punishing the victims of that exploitation as an enforcement mechanism. Support for non-commercial surrogacy seems to be unanimous if you're wondering what people's thoughts are on surrogacy in principle.

    Like I get that we all love to be little chaos demons here from time to time but surely we owe each other better faith discussion than this

    • Zuzak [fae/faer, she/her]
      hexagon
      ·
      2 years ago

      I felt that I needed to put to death the line of "It's literally buying babies" because that line is a ridiculous, thought terminating cliche that frustrates any attempt at a good faith discussion of the issue. I came out swinging and while I admit I've been harsher on some people in here than was warranted, I don't really regret slamming that specific line into the dirt, considering plenty of people upvoted it and nobody really pushed back on it. Yeah some people in that thread weren't being unreasonable, but in that case if the shoe doesn't fit, don't wear it.

  • ssjmarx [he/him]
    ·
    2 years ago

    Actually, all forms of pregnancy should be banned :volcel-judge:

  • jabrd [he/him]
    ·
    2 years ago

    The anti-surrogacy critique for the sake of power differentials between surrogate and client(?) is very similar imo to the critique of polyamory/relationships-with-large-age-gaps/intra-org relationships I see here occasionally, again also for the sake of the potential power differentials between participants. They’re not wrong in those specific - but also all too common - circumstances, but they’re also not the whole truth of the situation and can be taken as blanket criticism of the practice which they shouldn’t be. And if you are trying to blanket write off really any practice that comes down to an issue of bodily autonomy fuck off you tosser. Go do some self-crit and come back

    Like you could make the exact same arguments about blood donations but I don’t see anyone rushing to end the practice. Hopefully just to make it more equitable if anything

    • RION [she/her]
      ·
      2 years ago

      Like you could make the exact same arguments about blood donations

      Yeah I'm a Jehovah's Witness (Hexbear branch), why do you ask?

    • WoofWoof91 [comrade/them]
      ·
      edit-2
      2 years ago

      Like you could make the exact same arguments about blood donations

      speaking to some yankee friends, fuck i wish i could get paid to donate blood like they do
      that could get me enough cash to not have to pick between power and food lol and i make that shit for free

      • UlyssesT
        ·
        edit-2
        17 days ago

        deleted by creator

      • jabrd [he/him]
        ·
        2 years ago

        My parents are 12 years apart in age and doing fine 30 years later. I’m not saying there aren’t creeps, just that this site has the nuance of a particularly mouthy high schooler

          • jabrd [he/him]
            ·
            2 years ago

            Ok? Thanks for your addition. How does 25 and 37 sound? Please let me know your opinion without any context or knowledge of the individuals involved at all. It makes it more pure as a ““Marxist”” endeavor ya know?

              • jabrd [he/him]
                ·
                edit-2
                2 years ago

                I have a whole thing written out but in my heart you’re a smol bean leftist and the important thing to learn here is that the critique needs to more keenly focus in on the mechanism of oppression rather than the social marker around that node of oppression because, tho they can be highly correlated, they are not 1:1. I mean shit this critique is completely devoid of materialism

                Like, how do older men exploit younger women? It isn’t just because they have grey in their beards. There’s an entire material infrastructure they contribute to and take advantage of. Two relationships that look the same on paper can act completely differently

    • Zuzak [fae/faer, she/her]
      hexagon
      ·
      2 years ago

      This is the most palatable way I could find to express how pissed I am about this.