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I hope no parent would tell their child that under any circumstance. It's bad enough to know one of your parents didn't want you and they walked away. Hopefully she didn't tell their son.
You'd think. I meet alot of grown up people who have self esteem issues because their parents told them they were a mistake and they wanted to abort or found out about the pregnancy too late. Common sense is not in everybody's house.
not much to add except - frankly I don't remember a damn thing from when I was in Kindergarten. How do people remember? Maybe only traumatic events, but at age 5?
you'd be surprised at things like this. I was 5 when a sibling passed away and I remember a lot of things about when she was sick, her funeral, good memories from before. Traumas have a way of shaping your memories even as a child.
Any guy with half a brains will by now have realized he is walking into a "child support abscondance" lawsuit. If the mother were to sue this person and slap a paternity test, no court in the country can contest her.
Actually not. Ignoring for a moment that this whole thread and the thread that preceded it are shameless fabrications, they have made for a bit of interesting discussion. If this were real, the "child" is 24.
Generally speaking...
The mother's ability to open a child support claim is done when the child reaches the majority. From the yarn that has been spun, we can presume the mother never filed for support or listed the father on the birth certificate, as she insisted the "child would never know who the father was".
On the subject of paternity, unless it was established when the child was a minor, the mother has no legal right to paternity information anymore. In most states, the adult son is now too old to file for paternity testing either.
So basically, they're all **** out of luck if they are looking for a judgment for compensation or forced paternity testing from any court.
Of course, this all assumes that there is an adult son, a jilted mother, and a runaway father, all of whom are made up by an inventive storyteller who (I hope) is getting paid by the site to crank out nonsense that gets a lot of response, thereby generating thousands of hits. Because if someone isn't getting paid to crank out this nonsense, there's a problem.
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Of course, this all assumes that there is an adult son, a jilted mother, and a runaway father, all of whom are made up by an inventive storyteller who (I hope) is getting paid by the site to crank out nonsense that gets a lot of response, thereby generating thousands of hits. Because if someone isn't getting paid to crank out this nonsense, there's a problem.
Truth is so often way stranger than fiction and that's nothing novel. Honestly I don't give a rat's patootie either way and am certainly not going to lose any sleep over it. Glanced at some of Dr Phil's programs?
To me the story sounds pretty legitimate but that's just me. If it's a tale and the author needs to verify portions of the novel he's in the middle of writing then all power to him for seeking opinions and thus the furtherance of his story line. If that's the case he still has to sell the story and, with all due respect, it's a story that has already been told over and over again in novels and in films over many decades and it's highly unlikely he has some new twist to make this tale better than any other.
On the other hand and, if his story is real, why are people spending energy railing upon him for being a phony? Nothing better to do with time?
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