Why did you selectively quote me to exclude the part where I mentioned breastfeeding?
Besides, some women don't produce milk either, or not enough of it. Bonding with a parent is not exclusive to breastfeeding, either (though of course it helps!).
As long as we're being perfectly honest, it seems if you had bothered to read at least the next sentence it would have better qualified you for answering the post and spared you from making a snarky but wrong reply.
All this besides the obviously wrong equivalence you make between child bearing and breast feeding.
The ability to bear children is pretty closely linked with the ability to feed them. It's interesting you find that (and my pointing out your terrible opening statement) 'obviously wrong'.
Closely but not inextricably so. Some mothers can't breastfeed (and some don't want to, as historically happened with some aristocracies). Some babies don't like it (my mother told me I rejected it after 1 month, and fed exclusively on formula after this). Some mothers pump milk and store it in a bottle for caretakers to give the baby. Some babies drink formula. All of this makes your alleged equivalence obviously wrong.
Please don't use child bearing (something that happens before) as an excuse to avoid child raising (something that happens after).
Fathers can take care of babies in the absence of mothers.
Besides, some women don't produce milk either, or not enough of it. Bonding with a parent is not exclusive to breastfeeding, either (though of course it helps!).