The Gay
Adoption Conundrum
by
Jeffrey A. Tucker
Closely
linked to the issue of gay marriage is the issue of gay adoption.
The subject raises the stakes in the current national controversy,
and, as usual, state intervention complicates the picture enormously.
Below
I argue for the validity of the political intuition of both the
left (that gay couples shouldn't be prohibited by law from adopting)
and the right (legalization raises the specter of children placed
by courts in ethically dysfunctional environments and otherwise
used as political footballs). I conclude that the social, cultural,
and religious conflicts associated with gay marriage and adoption
are best resolved through laissez-faire.
In
a painfully circuitous column on gays and marriage, Jonah Goldberg
writes: "I remain unconvinced that marriage is a 'fundamental right'
and therefore immune to government regulation." Rather than try
to sort out the myriad confusions in this sentence, let us just
state the obvious: marriage and family, like the ownership of property,
precede the state. They are rooted in the freedom of association
and the right of contract. They need no state to exist. In a state
of anarchy, there would still be property, marriage, and family.
Historically,
religious institutions and clan, not the state, had the strongest
claim to adjudicating matters involving marriage, though in a free
society the decision to marry is the individual's. (The Catholic
Church has long recognized the right of the individual in the choice
of a spouse, for example, and the sacrament itself is confected
not by the priest but by the couple.) The state took over this power
and has made a mess of it. It should be restored to private institutions,
and be none of the state's business.
So
should gays be permitted to marry? Michael
Kinsley is right: government should get out of the marriage
business. This answer flows directly from the general embrace of
the principle of free association: people should be permitted to
do whatever they want provided they aren't violating anyone's rights.
They do not have the right to expect the Church, employers, or anyone
else to recognize their choices as valid and morally legitimate,
of course. If people have a problem with the idea of two men or
two women being married as would practically everyone throughout
the whole history of world there is an easy solution: don't recognize
it as a marriage.
We
do this all the time in life. I love music but I don't recognize
rap, heavy metal, and Christian contemporary music as genuinely
musical. I think they're junk and I'm glad to say so. In fact, my
opinion is that anyone who listens to this stuff is doing harm to
himself, and, in the broadest possible sense, is debasing the culture.
But to listen to this music is not harmful to anyone but those who
choose to do so, so I am not within my rights to prevent it. As
for the culture, I do not enjoy the right to shape it according
to my own views of what constitutes beauty and art and truth. (If
I did I would force everyone to listen to 16th century
liturgical music, properly performed.)
So
it is with gay marriage. If you think it's a hoax, nothing prevents
a free person in a free society from saying so, just as nothing
prevents anyone from calling a union of two persons or more of whatever
sort a "marriage." If you don't like that, and believe that society
requires an overarching coercive authority to impose the family
structure, you do not have much faith in the orderliness of human
choice, you are not a liberal in the classical sense, and you won't
like the rest of this article. Suffice it to say that the traditional
family structure is not a legal artifice; it is an outgrowth of
tendencies in human nature, and it is not going to disappear because
some men in Texas shack up and call themselves married.
The
existence of the state, as well as its benefits and legal rights
associated with marriage, add a layer of confusion. The very presence
of legal marital protections and benefits cries out for the state
to define what constitutes a legitimate marriage. By itself this
is a dangerous power. If the state can define a marriage, it can
dictate the workings of the marriage and family too. It can police
the raising of children, kidnap kids, prevent them from working
for wages negotiated by contract, limit or mandate family size,
and a host of other considerations.
That
marriage should be privatized is clear enough, but it leaves out
a crucially important consideration: children. This factor is the
main concern of those who would legally prohibit marital unions
among gays. The worry is that once the state permits gays to define
themselves as married, nothing stands in their way of adopting and
raising children a fact which gives rise to important concerns about
the health of children in a setting that in all times and all places
has been considered ethically objectionable by the dominant social
ethos.
But
let's be precise about what in particular seems troubling about
this to the point that many believe the force of law should prevent
it. It can't be merely the desire for all children to grow up in
perfectly stable and moral home environments. Everyone knows children
who are raised in less than ideal circumstances, from single-parent
households resulting from death or divorce, to poverty, to cases
of neglect. As sad as these cases are, hardly anyone thinks that
the state should correct every one of them by imposing idealized
circumstances, and properly so.
We
look at such cases, feel bad about them, but recognize them as part
of life essentially private tragedies (I'm leaving out cases of
severe physical abuse, of course). It's true that children need
both mothers and fathers, and it is absurd to pretend that anything
less is just as good. But when this doesn’t happen, we help where
and when we can but don't necessarily believe that the state should
actively intervene to crush all less-than-ideal family settings.
What's
more, it cannot be ruled out that children raised in a stable home
with two responsible parents of the same sex would be a setting
more preferred than an unstable home with parents of a different
sex or a single-parent household. In fact, most people these days
know of gay parents with children, and they haven't led to any sort
of social calamity. Such families are
surprisingly bourgeois in terms of their internal life, and
the results of such parenting on the kids. Perhaps this isn't surprising;
the desire to raise an adopted child may reflect a desire for normalization
and regularization on the part of gays.
None
of which suggests that people should or should not approve of gay
adoptions. In all societies everywhere, such cases have always existed
under a cloud of some degree of social disapproval and they always
will. The only question of any political relevance is whether the
state should actively intervene to prevent them or whether this
is an issue that should be dealt with through non-violent means.
As it is, there is nothing the state can or should do about single
people having and raising children outside of a conventional marriage
(of course it should not be subsidized by the state either). So
it is unclear why adoptions should not be similarly permitted as
merely the consequence of voluntary choice.
A
main problem that inchoately exists here is the sense that gay adoptions
would be somehow foisted on society via the court system, as an
imposition, just as the courts are working to grant gays many special
preferences in the law (e.g. the alleged right not to be discriminated
against). We can easily imagine state adoption agencies, and those
licensed by the state, adopting a rule of "non-discrimination" between
gay and non-gay households, a completely preposterous rule but one
that would be lobbied for by organized gay activists. Political
pressure to relent in any such discrimination for or against gays
would be intense.
Foreseeing
an adoption system as politically poisoned as the current foster-care
system, many people suspect that the demand for the right to marry
and adopt is merely a ploy to have the state intervene yet again
against bourgeois values. This is not an unreasonable assumption.
The state adoption agencies in question, if they are permitted to
choose gay parents, will not be wholly concerned about the well
being of children or the desire of the donor mother. The children
will be placed with a variety of other bureaucratic and political
considerations in mind.
Even
now, the entire adoption process is fraught with interventions that
impede its development. Adoptive parents cannot purchase parenting
rights, so there is no market as such. Agencies are hindered in
their ability to make contracts in all directions. Private services,
including those that would pay mothers to carry children to term,
are either forbidden or crowded out by public services. The first
step to clarity, then, is abolish all these interventions and not
impose new ones, codifying neither for nor against additional rights
for gays. The entire problem could be left to (unregulated) private
organizations.
How
would adoption work in a free society in which gays were permitted
to call themselves married? The donating parent is a contracting
party and would only give up a child provided certain conditions
are met. That the child grow up in a regularized family environment
is a minimum expectation that most all donating mothers (and fathers)
would ask. If her child were to be raised by a two-person, single-sex
household, she would surely have to approve it. In general, who
is in a better position to want the best possible environment for
a child besides the mother?
In
a free society, there are no grounds to prevent women who bear children
from arranging peaceful exchanges and cooperative arrangements concerning
the parenting rights they own from the outset. If a woman conceives
a child, she owns the parenting rights and can choose to give them
away or sell them as she wishes. In this case, it is highly likely
that the mother would seek conventional families to adopt her child.
It might be that single-sex, two parent households would face a
dearth of available children for adoption. Certainly they would
have to pay a high price for the rights, given that we could expect
far fewer mothers to approve these conditions than more conventional
families.
It's
true that gays have a higher income than non-gays and could well
afford the price. But there is another price tag to consider in
a free market: the mother herself would be in a position to earn
money from contracting with parents over parenting rights. Donor
agencies concentrating on non-gay parenting might find themselves
in a position to outbid the donor agencies concentrating on gay
parenting.
In
fact, we might expect that agencies and donors would have every
incentive based on deep moral conviction to outbid the offers
of pro-gay adoption agencies, and convince risk-averse mothers-to-be
that their child should be adopted by non-gays. Each side would
have every incentive to make the strongest possible case for or
against gay adoption, thus providing an environment in which the
research and findings on prospects for gay parenting would receive
maximum encouragement and exposure.
We
can see, then, that the free market might end up seriously discouraging
gay adoptions, simply because mothers who relinquish parenting rights
would likely prefer non-gay to gay parents. Would households in
which gay couples raise adopted children continue to exist? Most
certainly, but the crucial thing here is that all parties would
have to agree to the arrangement. Would there be abusive settings
and morally objectionable environments for kids? Certainly, but
those exist now, whether the families are gay or non-gay.
Under
the principle of laissez-faire, all parties would have every reason
to want to continue to monitor the arrangements once they are agreed
upon. Moreover, the experience of present and future gay adoptions
would have a big influence on their prevalence in the far future.
The feedback works here too: gay parents would have every reason
to do the best possible job so as to improve the reputation of gay
parenting.
Of
course those who object on moral grounds would continue to be free
to decry such arrangements, just as gay parents would have every
reason to dispute their claims. This solution doesn't solve every
problem but neither does freedom itself. Freedom at least takes
politics out of the question, which is the first step toward finding
the truth in an atmosphere of peace.
Thanks
to Stephan Kinsella, Walter Block, and Joseph Stromberg for their
comments.
July
8, 2003
Jeffrey
Tucker [send him mail]
is editorial vice president of www.Mises.org.
Copyright
© 2003 LewRockwell.com
Jeffrey
Tucker Archives
|