Wednesday, January 24, 2018

DNA Surrogate Citizenship Adoptions: A New Way To Traffic Tiny Humans

To begin, allow me to put forth this disclaimer:

THIS HAS NOTHING TO DO WITH WHAT PEOPLE DO IN THE BEDROOM

Now, that we have that out of the way, let us dissect this issue of the U.S. State Department denying a surrogate child's citizenship.

U.S. Completely Shut Down In International Adoptions

This has to do with $13,400 a year in adoption tax credits and tax exempt trust funds.

This has to do with a financial investment in chattel.

This has to do with the U.S. stopping the international trafficking of tiny humans.

This has to do with pushing the proverbial envelope in the emerging industry of buying and selling tiny humans.

If the tiny adopted human grows up, and something happens where its naturalized citizenship is revoked, what is the country of origin for deportation?

This has everything to do with foreign nationals coming into the U.S. and taking over our government.

Did you know there are numerous Members of Congress who possess dual oaths with Israel like Jerrold Nadler, Ranking Member of the U.S. House Judiciary Committee?

Well, now you do.

Think about that the next time someone kicks in your door to steal your child and wonder, whose best interest are being protected.

If they can adopt this child without termination of parental rights in a court of law, then we have another instance of the residuals of the peculiar institution raising its ugly head, again.

Did you know Israel is formatting U.S. public policy in child welfare without even registering as a foreign agent under FARA?

Now, you do.

Did the surrogate mother register under FARA, considering the fact that she is doing an international transaction through the U.S. State Department.

Did she go through COA, of which I have some serious issues with its entire existence?

Below, is a video of Marianne Azizi reporting out of Israel about the government legally kidnapping children, but it is worse in the U.S.



This litigation should be fun, well, at least for the DOJ and me.

Israel has always had a DNA issue with citizenship adoptions.

Gay couple sues State Dept for denying surrogate child’s citizenship

A gay couple is suing the U.S. State Department after the agency informed the couple that one of their twin sons, born through a surrogate mother, was denied citizenship because his father is an Israeli citizen, The Associated Press reported Wednesday.

Andrew and Elad Dvash-Banks, who are American and Israeli citizens, respectively, had two boys born through donor eggs carried by a surrogate mother in Canada last year. The two twin boys, Ethan and Aiden, share the same mother but each carries DNA from only one of the two fathers.

Upon returning to the U.S. with his family, Andrew Dvash-Banks was informed that his second twin, Ethan - who is biologically Elad's son - was not linked by DNA to an American citizen, and therefore does not benefit from automatic American citizenship.

LGBT and immigrants' rights groups argue that the agency is wrong, and that any child born to a U.S. citizen who marries abroad is owed U.S. citizenship, regardless of where they are born or whether one parent is a foreigner.

"What we're trying to do is pursue justice for Ethan," said Elad Dvash-Banks, "and correct a wrong that the State Department is continuing to pursue that might affect other couples."

"I started crying," added Andrew Dvash-Banks. "These are twins, how can you differentiate between them? They were born minutes apart."

Immigration Equality's executive director Aaron Morris told the AP that the agency's decision represents a type of discrimination that gay or otherwise nontraditional families experience at the hands of U.S. immigration personnel.

"If a mother and father walk into a consulate and have a marriage certificate and birth certificate, they're never asked any questions about the biology of the child," said Morris. "But the converse is also true and every same-sex couple will be asked that."

Legal experts say the 2010 defeat of the Defense of Marriage Act (DOMA) at the Supreme Court paved the way for a number of cases involving both artificial insemination and LGBT parenthood to come forward.

"This is an absolutely fascinating, cutting edge area of law that stems from [DOMA] being overturned," immigration lawyer Ally Bolour told the AP. "It was just a matter of time for this issue to be decided by the courts."

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