@AngryFeralKitty@soggybrocoli I think while the underlying premise of what you said is correct this is really close to the rhetoric people use that disabled people should stay home. The problem is people who don't need accommodations framing comfort/preference as accomodations.
@RipleyFechtmann@Lurker01234@danae_hudlow I would not want to bring a child into this world if i could not meet its basic needs. That's unfair to a child and any child deserves a good quality of life.
Can we stop acting like we can't make the world a better place for people with down syndrome (and disabled people more broadly) and also choose not to have a disabled child.
These are 2 separate issues.
The discourse around Downs Syndrome continues to be unbelievably ugly and callous and cruel, and the fact that this discourse is considered normal and reasonable will never cease to have me feeling like I'm living in the Twilight Zone.
@RipleyFechtmann@Lurker01234@danae_hudlow You don't know the severity until the child is born tho. If your concern is having resources to take care of a child with more severe needs finding out at birth is too late, right? The baby is born.
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