The Roman Catholic Church has adamantly opposed birth control measures,
which could prevent many of these scenarios. Does injustice occur? Oh
yes, it certainly does, and it's terrible that it does. This is a
problem that requires more education about sex, rather than advocacy
for inhibition of it and anti-birth-control nonsense to at least get
headed in a direction that can at least reduce a lot of this.
> > > It's really the only option a man has to level the equality. A
> > > woman can simply choose to abort and get out of it. A man can't
> > > have that option.
> >
> > The reality is that men aren't equal to women. Why can't you be a
> > real man about this and accept it?
>
> Oooh...
>
> Let me tell you something. I have four kids, and all four I raise and
> take care of.
> I didn't abandon them, do you understand?
> I am their Dad, their protector and guide. I didn't bail.
> And I stood by my wife's side, through thick and thin and still do to
> this day.
> I am devoted to her, 100%, do you understand?
That's excellent, and you have my utmost respect for that. It doesn't
make you equal to women though.
> So often throughout history men claim
> > superiority over women,
>
> Nobody is doing that, so put down your feminist sword.
Put down your holy doctrine and light it on fire by denouncing and
rejecting its hateful sexist misogynistic ideals, and the feminists will
lovingly drop their swords.
> >but when you screw up and make a woman pregnant
>
> Wow, you arrogant piece of shit, you act like it's just all him that
> does this.
It is his fault if he's a rapist, and it would certainly qualify if
that rapist's intention was not to get his victim pregnant.
But when it is consentual, then I regard them as both being
responsible, and this is why I advocate for the father's opinion to be
important as well. Now, if he doesn't want be a father, and he did
take appropriate precautions ahead of time (and had her consent), then
I do lean fairly strongly toward favouring abortion in such a case,
but I also think that "time is of the essence" needs to be emphasized
very strongly so as to terminate the pregnancy as early as possible
too primarily as a matter of greater convenience to her.
> > you whine about it instead of taking responsibility by whining about
> > how "men can't have that option [to abort a foetus]." You played a
> > willful role in the process of creating life, fully aware of the
> > expectation of parents to care for any babies that result from a
> > pregnancy ended by a birth, so why are you suddenly being a traitor
> > to manhood by "wimping out?"
>
> You piece of shit, for 25 years I've stood by my wife's side and my
> children's side.
> That's not wimping out.
Correct, that's being a responsible parent.
> > > So the only option he has is to hope she will abort, then he can
> > > get out of it.
> >
> > Actually, he has many options, and some were preventive.
>
> For her too!
> Gee, you forget that don't you?
No, I did not forget about that. There are a different set of options.
> And if the
> > justice system isn't biased toward religious forced-birther ideals
> > that advocate for the systematic enslavement of women,
>
> But you're perfectly fine with the enslavement of men. How "fair" of
> you.
No, and it's not about fairness, it's about freedom. Both parents, in
accordance with own moral standards, are entitled to freedom which
comes with a cost: Responsibility. And the freedom to not have to
endure that responsibility is also of paramount importance, so the
choices people make when creating life carry a certain burden within
the confines of certain expectations of society, which is necessary
for the survival and well-being of all of its participants.
If people are forced to become parents when that's not what they really
want to be (e.g., because corrupt religious values were brutally forced
into the law books), then the quality of society diminishes. This is
one of the primary reasons I favour support for abortion, but also
don't ignore responsibility for those who choose to carry through.
> there may even be
> > some options in legal recourse available (particularly if the man
> > had been raped or was otherwise forced or tricked into impregnating
> > her).
> >
> > > Now, there are real men who will say, "I'll stand by you and step
> > > up". They will help take care of the child.
> >
> > Indeed, this is the case with most fathers since it is highly likely
> > that the vast majority of pregnancies are intentional.
>
> Really? Most? I supervise over 2,000 who didn't. Where were they?
> And where are their children? I'll see them in a few years too, as
> they will follow right along their footsteps.
[snip - for brevity]
They don't represent the overall population. Unfortunately many
children learn bad habits from their parents along with the good
habits, which is a good reason to advocate for teaching kids to think
for themselves rather than to follow some wicked religious dogma.
It's a shame that there are so many people who don't take
responsibility for their own actions, and it's great that there are
responsible people like yourself who are involved in their lives and
hopefully succeeding in influencing them toward being more responsible.
--
Fidem Turbāre, the non-existent atheist goddess
"Modern Christian: Someone who can take time out from complaining
about 'welfare mothers popping out babies we have to feed' to complain
about welfare mothers getting abortions that PREVENT more babies to be
raised at public expense."
-- Paul David Wright