Posted on 02/02/2015 11:31:41 PM PST by Citizen Zed
Registrar Janet M. Rainey outlined the procedures in a late January letter.
In her letter, Rainey instructs hospitals that the children of two women who are married to each other should have both parents listed on their birth certificates.
The ACLU says it's essential to have a birth certificate with both parents' names to allow each parent the same legal rights to interact with schools, doctors and others.
(Excerpt) Read more at wset.com ...
For legal purposes only, perhaps a section for legal guardians, but birth parents are essential to know for possible health reasons.
Such things are much simpler when society doesn’t give in to the deviants.
There is no requirement to record the sire? What use is the document anyways if there is no pedigree?
What a racket. Those one night stands come with a price, GUYS!
You can have your sex after marriage. And if she was queer before you,
forget about it. RUN!
one simple rule of thumb will save you from such drama
NEVER DATE LIBERAL CHICKS
If the paper is to publish two lesbians as parents on a birth certificate—or two male homosexuals as parents they need to provide the biological parent as well.The whole thing suggests WHY America once had sense enough to just say no to
homosexual relationships.
WRONG, an adopted parent's name doesn't go on a birth certificate, does it?
The birth certificate includes biological identity of the child. There is nothing bio or logical about a same sex "birth parent".
There’s been at least one case where a man who merely responded to a lesbian couple’s plea for a sperm donor was made later to pay up child support (in spite of their contractual agreement).
They should at least require truthful information on the birth certificate:
Mother’s name: _________________
Father’s name (if known): _________________
Pervert’s name (if the parent wants some non-parent to have parental rights): _________________
That would cover everything, at least until the far left fringe gets even more creative.
“WRONG, an adopted parent’s name doesn’t go on a birth certificate, does it?”
Actually it does in Virginia.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.