So you do get it, I knew it.
All that other, I can't agree with Avante totally was, hahaha~~~~~~
whichever are going to be the better providing and more caring parents. beyond that, yes i'm sure it would be useful for there to be a male figure and female figure (to help guide the son/daughter when certain situations come up). but kids have so many other role models to look up to. i never really had "the talk" with my old man. i mean we would discuss things here and there, but there was never that one definitive "talk." in fact i would talk to my cousins or friends more than i did with my dad about that stuff.
so the importance of that can be pretty overrated. as long as the parents are loving, caring, providing, and supportive i couldn't care less
So you do get it, I knew it.
All that other, I can't agree with Avante totally was, hahaha~~~~~~
Was that funny or what? The guy tried everything possible to never, ok ok you're right, it is better for a kid to have a mom and a dad.
Ha~~~~~~~~~~~~
Your reading comprehension skills blow
yes i'm sure it would be useful for there to be a male figure and female figure (to help guide the son/daughter when certain situations come up).
You nailed it my man
A boy needs a father, not two moms who argue over how to raise a kid. Simply common sense.
Last edited by Avante; 04-01-2016 at 08:14 PM.
It's been a while since I read the study (maybe a year), but it was conducted by the IIRC the Family Research Council or something like that. It claimed to be the only study (at the time) with a big enough, reliable enough sample size. It looked at children adopted by gay couples and found that they were at higher risk for things such as molestation, depression, drug addiction, not finishing college etc. (basically out of some 60 categories which you could say are predictors of achievmant these children, now adults, faired worse than kids not raised by a gay couple in all but 4 categories, and by statistically significant margins in a lot of them).
You can search for the article, but if you come up empty I can link it for you.
Of course, every article has its biases. I don't personally know anything about the group ( , I'm not even sure if I have its name down) or reliability, but I'm sure they're susceptible potentially to the same political biases & interest group pressures that most others are. I'm not kidding myself. But, all I can go on is the study, and if it didn't give conclusive answers to some of these questions--and as I did I'm sure you can see they're not without their underlying assumptions that warrant still further investigation--it at least sheds some light on the issue, where I personally feel that "political correct" people have dismissed outright way too easily since it may hurt feelings.
Family Research Council is a biased conservative Christian en y.
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