Quebec OKs adoption of 3-year-old by 3 dads after court ruling

Three men have legally adopted a three-year-old girl in Quebec, raising objections to yet another redefinition of marriage and family.

“We have decided to lay a child’s needs and well-being…

Three men have legally adopted a three-year-old girl in Quebec, raising objections to yet another redefinition of marriage and family.

“We have decided to lay a child’s needs and well-being on the altar of adults’ sexual wants,” public commentator Allie Beth Stuckey said on her podcast “Relatable.”

The men, who characterize their relationship as a “polycule,” said approval process took seven years with Quebec’s youth protective services.

The adoption comes following an April court ruling requiring the province to legally recognize families with more than two parents, the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation reported. The province is reportedly appealing the decision.

The three men raised the little girl for two years under foster-care services and have now officially adopted her, the Toronto Sun reports. 

“We had a lot of things to go through in order to have that accreditation,” one of the men said in an interview. “But it’s through that process that they learned we are different because we are three, but we aren’t actually that different from any other family.” 

Stuckey disagrees, saying the nature of three men is very different from the biological design of a marriage and subsequent family. 

“You actually are, though, because you’re three dudes, which tells me you have no moral limits,” Stuckey said. “If you’re willing to not only defy nature, and you are willing to defy even liberal definitions of marriage, and you live in some kind of inherently unstable polycule situation, then you do not have the correct components to raise a child.” 

She said such a relationship creates a biological impossibility to bear children, and therefore, these men should not be raising a child. 

“There is no end to the confusion and instability and chaos that a situation like this can cause,” Stuckey said, expressing her sincere pity for the little girl. 

The matter isn’t only one of religion, she said, but of biology. 

“Even if we take religion out of it, let’s just look at this scientifically,” she continues. “Two men or two women who want to be in a relationship have to acknowledge that they do not have the parts that are needed to create a child. And therefore, because biology, not bigotry, has set limitations on your reproductive abilities, then there should be limits and restrictions and regulations around your ability to obtain and raise a child.” 

Stuckey compared this situation to the child sacrifice of pagan nations in ancient history, saying today is no different. 

“We are still sacrificing children. We are no better than the Aztecs, we are no better than any other pagan society that has lived,” Stuckey said. “Whether it’s through abortion, whether its gender ideology butchering the bodies of children, or whether it’s through this, purposefully laying them down on the altar of adults’ sexual whims.” 

Five other Canadian provinces and territories, including Ontario and British Columbia, already recognize families of more than two parents, CBC reported.