Airline: Adoptive Parents Travel 6000 Miles To Bring Home Child | A&E

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A couple travels 6000 miles to bring their adopted child home in this clip from Season 1, Episode 12, “Relative Values”. #Airline
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In Airline, cameras follow the pilots, flight attendants and airport employees of Southwest Airlines, capturing passenger outbursts and heartwarming stories as well as the interactions among the crew and staff.

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35 thoughts on “Airline: Adoptive Parents Travel 6000 Miles To Bring Home Child | A&E

  1. Connie is the most unhappy person on earth. It’s kind of funny seeing someone that miserable wearing a ridiculous Looney Tunes shirt 😝

  2. The baby is totally adorable! I wonder how she is doing now. If she does have any questions about her birth family or homeland, I truly hope that her adoptive parents are able and willing to answer them to the best of their knowledge.

  3. Shes cute. Im sure this is a good family. They seem like good people. I have a biological daughter, just one, spoiled daddys girl, teenager, yeah,

  4. Yes its hard for Chinese girls to be adopted but there are no American children needing to be adopted. How sad you go to another country & take children from that country when your own country have millions waiting. The cost of airplane tickets back & forth, hotels, taxi cabs, food, & cost of child cant be any more than here in America. I know…i was one of those children who aged out of a home….waiting for you.

  5. My American parents tried going the local route first by trying to adopt an American child but they said the process was too stressful, difficult, and they feared that the birth parents would try to get back into the child's life in negative ways. I see alot of comments here asking why not adopt from America, but they never ask why the adoption process to travel 6k miles to another land is somehow easier than their domestic adoption programs. Maybe you should find ways to fix the efficiency of US domestic adoption instead of shaming these parents. Foreign children will also grow up to have greater respect and gratitude for the environment they have in the USA compared to American born children. I was adopted in Russia and was in a state run orphanage with babushkas and the whole deal. Malnutrition, neglect, and cold weather (-12° F) last time I was there. My birth parents were victims of the Soviet system, and it eventually broke them. Records show my birth mom was suspected of prostitution and was a drug user through her pregnancy. There's a 10% chance of Russian orphans to grow up to see their 18th birthday. The people in this video deserve nothing but respect.

  6. There are plenty of American born children ending up in the broken foster care system who should be considered for adoption but I suspect that it’s the complexion of the problem.👶🏽👶🏾👶🏿

  7. I applaud you so much. Coming from an adoptee I am so grateful for people like my parents and you, because we know that you want us for sure because of all the questions time money that goes into adopting. I know I was especially blessed because I never spent a day in the system or foster care because of people like ya'll. God bless you and Rebecca.

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