tj444
Posts: 7574
Joined: 3/7/2010 Status: offline
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quote:
ORIGINAL: missiesfavourite nobody said the airline required that - I do not know any airline that would require that - they ask you when the baby is due and if that is not too close they transport you - no big issue an airline main concern is to avoid that you deliver the baby during flight pardon me - you seem to construct a reason for blaming the mother for a risk that does not exist in the way you imagine it Virgin does.. even if the airline didn't require a Doctors written letter/ok it would be in the airlines fine print as highly recommended (which also covers their butt).. http://www.virgin-atlantic.com/us/en/travel-information/special-assistance/pregnancy.html There is a risk in everything.. That would not be a risk I would take, not with a baby that I wanted to be as healthy as possible.. it was their risk to take, now look at the problems they have as a result- a premmie baby (which may have health problems later in life), a huge fight on their hands stuck between their insurance company and the hospital, possibly declaring bankruptcy, and subjecting their child to being American and required to file tax returns with the IRS every year even (if she doesn't earn anything), subject to possibly being turned away from banks due to being American, and I am sure the US govt will come up with more hoops for American non-residents to jump thru in the coming years..
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As Anderson Cooper said “If he (Trump) took a dump on his desk, you would defend it”
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