Wednesday, October 27, 2010

Wetness Before Periods

Siena, who is disabled wants to have a child offers his sperm to a lesbian couple





Cortona The 35 year-old put the ad on the Internet. Two Siena answered the call. They want to get pregnant, "according to nature, without resorting to artificial insemination"

Siena - After the two men from Livorno who had a child with a womb for rent is still controversy in Tuscany. This time it's the donor, a disabled 35 year old looking for a lesbian couple who can not "go abroad for sons. "Two Sienese women have accepted the invitation and are now trying to get pregnant," not through medically assisted reproduction - as we read in the newspaper the Nation - but simply by nature. "
The appeal Online is the story of Gabriel Viti, of Cortona, where he was Head of Culture, and Valerie and Diana - a fictional name - just told the two women last night at the microphones of the radio local Antenna Radio Esse. The man had opened four months ago, the site www.vogliamoavereunfiglio.org stated that he wished to offer his seed. "When we read the appeal of Gabriel - women say - did not we think for a moment: we have emailed and fortunately we responded. "
" Disability is not for Gabriel handicap " The two have been together for three years but are unable for economic reasons to resort to artificial insemination heterologous abroad. Gabriel, however, suffers from spasticity caused by birth asphyxia. "No prejudice - women continue - we have not thought of Gabriel disability as a handicap or a risk factor for the child that we hope to arrive. We know that Gabriel is healthy for us is no different from others. "And on the presence of biological father in the life of the unborn added:" We talked about it several times. It is a solution then we will evaluate that when the time comes. "
Controversy Immediate replication Carlo Casini, president of Pro-Life Movement, which criticized the possibility that the three can undergo artificial insemination," The law also allows couples 40 unmarried, provided that the components are straight and form a stable couple, access to artificial insemination. It is clear that stability must be ascertained. Rest, however, the idea that, just to protect the unborn child would be better to make a more rigorous law: that is, indicate a requirement that the couple married in a civil ceremony or religious, to a greater guarantee of stability. "

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