March 1, 1999
As your editorial "Fight over adoption secrecy"
(Feb. 22) points out, there are many sides to the
debate over adult adoptees' birth records.
Unfortunately, Time magazine and your editorial
chose to highlight dramatically just one of those
sides: the rights of a raped birth mother.
There are equally dramatic and more prevalent
situations on the other side of the equation.
The most compelling argument in this debate is
the human right of adult adoptees to have access
to vital information about themselves and their
background including medical heritage and
ethnicity no matter the circumstances of
their birth.
This basic information is of public record for
every other citizen.
With no help from the current law or system, I
discovered that every female over the age of 35
on both sides of my birth family either suffered
or died from breast cancer, a genetically
predisposed disease.
This is information that is vital to myself and
our daughter, due to be born in two weeks.
Yet some will continue to argue that my birth
mother's privacy is more important. As a
38-year-old concerned about my family's
well-being, I beg to differ.
Deb Schwarz
San Francisco
Your opinion on Oregon's adoptee rights initiative
(Measure 58) presents a perfect example of why, as
an adoptive father, I am so strongly in favor of
doing away with government-sanctioned secrecy and
shame in adoption.
The writer falls into the same attitude trap I
find so infuriating as an adoptive parent,
unthinkingly viewing adoption in formulaic terms
that stigmatize participants, especially the
adoptees. You raise the specter of the "angry,
perhaps dangerous child" from whom it seems
natural to provide special state "protection" for
birth parents.
Treating my adopted daughter like a perpetual
child even after she becomes an adult by keeping
lifelong secrets from her by teaching her
a lesson of shame and mistrust about herself
simply because she is adopted is an insult
not only to her but to her adoptive family as
well.
Prejudicial attitudes toward adoptees by society
are bad enough, but injury is added when such
attitudes are encoded so that the lessons in
shame and mistrust are state policy. Then
government-enforced intervention in the lives of
adults becomes discrimination against adoptees
and their adoptive families.
Kevin McCarty
Cupertino
Opening records for adults who were adopted in
"closed" proceedings when they were children does
not reveal the fault lines of heartbreak, as you so
contend. Rather, it reveals the fault lines of
deception and lies.
To deny people the right to know their very own
history is as incomprehensible as it is
demeaning. I am a 31-year-old male who was
adopted at birth in a closed (secret) adoption in
Sacramento County. Today I am a trusted public
safety official with a city in Northern
California.
Denying me access to my own personal records
serves no purpose other than to continue the
outrageous charade that contends I am not capable
of responsibly handling the details of my
conception and birth.
I wholeheartedly support the Oregon ballot
initiative.
As to your contention that opening secret records
could have a devastating effect on some who were
conceived out of acts of rape or incest, that
argument is one of the oldest and misused out
there.
The vast majority of closed adoptions had nothing
to do with rape or incest. The vast majority of
them took place during a time when it was
shameful for a young woman to be single and
pregnant.
Continuing to deny adult adoptees the most basic
information about their origins is an outdated
practice that desperately needs to be amended.
Oregon voters showed they understand that fact.
Hopefully, California voters will be given the
chance soon to make the much-needed change.
Rob Nichols
Redding
Your editorial adds nothing new or useful to the
current debate over adoptees vs. birth parents'
right to privacy. I can't decide which is more
offensive: your portrayal of birth mothers as
either victims of violent crime or "bad" girls [in
the view of a past era], or your portrayal of
searching adoptees as impatient, inconsiderate,
angry children.
At 31 years old I consider myself an adult
adoptee who would like to have at least as much
information about my ancestry as my Labrador
retriever has about hers.
Sarah Wright
San Anselmo
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