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America is the world’s fertility marketplace, and everyone knows it. That’s why wealthy foreign nationals come here, hire American women to carry their babies, and secure US citizenship for those children at birth. They do it inside a system with no guardrails. And when it blows up, everyone acts surprised.
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This is happening all over the United States, but this story we’re about to share with you is one of the most disturbing. It’s a tale about a wealthy California family living in a mysterious mansion full of kids. But even bigger than that, this is a story about commercial surrogacy, foreign money, and birthright citizenship colliding in the most predictable and horrifying way imaginable.
President Trump already signed an executive order targeting automatic birthright citizenship. That fight is heading straight for the Supreme Court. And stories like this are exactly why.
Now let’s walk through what actually happened in this creepy mansion.
But before we get into the specifics, we need to understand the scale of what’s happening.
In the past decade, a surge of wealthy foreigners—lured by this permissive atmosphere, and by blue-chip medical care—have enlisted American women as surrogates.
The New Yorker calls it a “permissive atmosphere.” That’s the polite and very highbrow way to say “wide open.” America has elite medical care and barely any federal rules around all this stuff. And when you put those two together, obviously people will take advantage. And we’re not just talking about “sweet couples” who want a baby, but big-time global money and baby farming.
The next part is even more important, because it exposes how wide open this entire industry is.
The New Yorker goes on:
But no federal laws govern the practice in the United States. Anyone can start a surrogacy agency; unlike opening a hair salon, or a day care, no qualifications are needed for the intimate, unpredictable work of bringing strangers together to create a new life.
Did you catch that? No federal laws. That means anyone can open one of these agencies. No real qualifications or decent oversight. That’s not some tiny little oversight that’s lost in the fine print. We’ve got a crazy system with the doors wide open. And when you combine wide-open doors and no rules with international clients and automatic citizenship the moment a baby is born here, this is exactly the kind of mess you end up with.
This wasn’t some random connection or a couple stumbling into American surrogacy by chance. All of this is organized, intentional, and built to serve international clients.
The New Yorker piece continues:
Guojun had started working with Babytree, an agency that caters to aspiring parents living in China.
These are agencies that are specifically designed to connect foreign nationals with American surrogates. It’s a streamlined racket. And when those children are born here, they receive US citizenship. That is why the birthright citizenship debate is so important. It’s tied directly to how this sketchy, dangerous industry operates in real life.
Next comes the moment that takes this from unusual to downright disturbing.
By the time police showed up at the mansion, they were trying to get a simple answer: how many children are actually living in this house? What happened next is downright scary.
The New Yorker piece keeps going:
When Calderon pressed her for specifics, Silvia consulted an Excel spreadsheet on her phone before responding that the tally was twenty-one.
A police detective asks how many children you have, and you have to open a spreadsheet to count them. When children are being tallied like line items, there’s a problem, folks. And this is the part of the story when people start asking whether this is about building a family or building something much darker.
One thing this surrogate does is try and keep the language soft and palatable. They use words like “journeys,” “intended parents,” and “growing families.” All of this jargon is wrapped in warmth and good ol’ family sentiment.
But then the New Yorker drops a line that cuts straight through the phony branding and forces you to see what was actually going on inside that creepy mansion.
By collecting children the same way they’d collected properties, Silvia and Guojun had reduced a benevolent act to a purely commercial exchange.
Obviously, to anybody with half a brain, this wasn’t about building some big, wholesome family. This was a baby business built on steady accumulation. The same mindset used to stack up real estate purchases was used for human lives. Little, innocent children. But this is what happens in a country that hands out automatic citizenship at birth. The line between building a family and building assets starts to blur in ways that should make everyone really nervous.
At this point in the story, we start to see the abuse unfold. We are told about infants hospitalized with bleeding behind the eyes and surveillance footage of nannies hitting children. There are toddlers with shaved heads, food hoarding, untreated medical conditions, and developmental delays. It’s a mansion of horrors.
But despite all that, the machine keeps rolling.
The New Yorker piece wraps up:
Nothing prevents Silvia and Guojun from continuing to expand their family, which is exactly what they’ve been doing.
Even after an infant suffered brain injuries, more than twenty children were taken into state custody. Even after surveillance footage showed violence, the current structure still allows this to go on. And all of this abuse is happening because we allow automatic citizenship at birth. Not to mention, we also have a fertility industry with almost no federal oversight.
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As a country, our crazy laws and failure to regulate have turned automatic citizenship and reproduction into an industry.
If wealthy foreign nationals can fly in, hire American women, create children on an assembly line, and walk away with US passports attached, then yes, we have a serious problem.
Birthright citizenship was never meant to underwrite a global baby business. And until we fix this, horror stories like this will keep happening.
You can read the entire New Yorker piece here.
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