Jersey Girl wrote:KevinSim wrote:I'm not talking about children in general. What I meant was that the term bastard refers to a child that is illegitimate, and I guess I have a problem with people using a derogatory word that indicates there's something wrong with a child just because of something that child's parents did or didn't do. I don't like the term bastard at all.
How is the child of two unmarried adults, "illegitimate"?
Kevin,
I promise you that I'm not trying to gang up on you here. I really encourage you to think about what you've stated and the terminology that you yourself have used regarding children. The term "illegitimate" is an archaic and outdated misnomer, in my opinion.
When a child is born of parents who have chosen not to marry, that child receives a birth certificate, that registers the particulars of their birth. Who they become from that point on is largely due to nature/nurture. What they believe about themselves and what they believe others believe about them, is largely who they will become.
When you lay a label such as "illegitimate" on a child, you are compromising their sense of self esteem and sense of self worth, and you are marginalizing a vulnerable population of our society. I don't think you mean to, but that is the product of your words here.
Please think about what those words mean to the child.
The child isn't responsible for the choices of their bio parents, why let the choices of their parents follow them all the days of their lives and possibly limit the person they believe they can become? Doesn't the child deserve a chance to become a whole person in their own right, free of the choices of their parents, to realize their own self potential?
I'm telling you, as someone who has "bastards" dangling around on her family tree and who has invested more than half of my life advocating for children, the term "illegitimate" is unfair, unnecessary and misdirected. It is just as hurtful the child as the word "bastard" is.
In this context, and in my view only, the real bastards are the people who fail to claim responsibility to take care of their own children.
We don't need to identify children as "illegitimate", we don't need to identify them as a child "born out of wedlock".
We can identify them by their name.
Kevin, if you're wiling to give this some thought, and when it comes to the social status of children, whenever the word "illegitimate" comes to your mind regarding that, I'd like you to try to think in terms of...
"This child has a legitimate right to go about life without being judged or labeled by the choices of his/her parents".
Stick around, I'll reprogram you eventually! :-)
I think I'm done with this part of the derail.