Phanatical
Happy Lala
In the Australian Legal system, it is next to impossible for a non-custodial father to avoid paying exorbitant child support - a substantial proportion of which is eaten up by the Child Support Agency and various feminist organisations attached to it.
The following arguments are mine, but they do not represent my personal views on the issue. Nevertheless, I believe they are worth considering within the context of the debate:
Unlike women - men not only lack the ability to abort their responsibilities, but also in the case of split couples are 10 times less likely to gain custody of their child, not to mention expected to pay exorbitant Child support (I know of no cases where a non-custodial mother has to pay child support to a father). There are too many women who not only use pregnancy as a way to force men to subsidise their way of life (in one particular case I was reading, a closed community of lesbians (here in Australia) would 'farm' men, and force them to pay child support to maintain their commune), but who also use their children to cause their spouses pain by teaching them to hate their fathers.
For me, abortion is a terrible, terrible thing no matter the circumstances. There are so many consequences to face, and where a child is not wanted every path leads to Hades. The example I gave earlier, of a father with no rights to their child, is just one of many sad realities in our society - and if he doesn't like it, unlike the mother he can't just abort His responsibility.
Father's rights cannot be denied. It is a simple fact that men - that fathers - have a vested interest in the abortion debate, because they too are affected by pregnancy. Perhaps not in the physical sense for nine months, but certainly in both an emotional sense and a financial reality that if the mother chooses, the father will hand over sixty percent of his earnings and assets every day for the next 18 years.
Perhaps the argument can be summed up as such: The right to raise a child goes hand in hand with the responsibility of doing so. You can't have one without the other, and if you deny father's rights, you can't expect them to honour the responsibility. If a mother can abort her child and the responsibilities involved with it, then shouldn't a father be able to at least abort his responsibilities?
The following arguments are mine, but they do not represent my personal views on the issue. Nevertheless, I believe they are worth considering within the context of the debate:
Unlike women - men not only lack the ability to abort their responsibilities, but also in the case of split couples are 10 times less likely to gain custody of their child, not to mention expected to pay exorbitant Child support (I know of no cases where a non-custodial mother has to pay child support to a father). There are too many women who not only use pregnancy as a way to force men to subsidise their way of life (in one particular case I was reading, a closed community of lesbians (here in Australia) would 'farm' men, and force them to pay child support to maintain their commune), but who also use their children to cause their spouses pain by teaching them to hate their fathers.
For me, abortion is a terrible, terrible thing no matter the circumstances. There are so many consequences to face, and where a child is not wanted every path leads to Hades. The example I gave earlier, of a father with no rights to their child, is just one of many sad realities in our society - and if he doesn't like it, unlike the mother he can't just abort His responsibility.
Father's rights cannot be denied. It is a simple fact that men - that fathers - have a vested interest in the abortion debate, because they too are affected by pregnancy. Perhaps not in the physical sense for nine months, but certainly in both an emotional sense and a financial reality that if the mother chooses, the father will hand over sixty percent of his earnings and assets every day for the next 18 years.
Perhaps the argument can be summed up as such: The right to raise a child goes hand in hand with the responsibility of doing so. You can't have one without the other, and if you deny father's rights, you can't expect them to honour the responsibility. If a mother can abort her child and the responsibilities involved with it, then shouldn't a father be able to at least abort his responsibilities?