drunkmonkey wrote: » Do we get a look in anywhere or can a man/boyfriend/fiance/husband legally challenge a woman's decision to abort? I've put in a poll to see what you think
LeinsterDub wrote: » Basically your asking can a man force a woman to carry a baby to term? NO!
Sesame wrote: » No. Seeing as a man can walk away from an unwanted pregnancy, a woman should be able to as well. .
MayoSalmon wrote: » Well he shouldn't have to maintain said baby if the opposite is true. Man favors abortion and woman does not.
MayoSalmon wrote: » So going by the majority of comments Men will continue to have zero rights when it concerns the welfare of their own child. Now equality can probably never been achieved nor should it really be since a man cannot carry the child however there is zero provisions given to men considering it is their child. Strange that but doesn't surprise me.
Delirium wrote: » Do explain how not supporting the idea that a guy can veto a womans choice to have an abortion means someone is opposed to any improvement of rights for fathers and their kids.
MayoSalmon wrote: » So going by the majority of comments Men will continue to have zero rights when it concerns the welfare of their own child.
seamus wrote: » No, because pregnancy is for the most part a one-sided affair and I don't believe the "I produced some sperm" argument holds much weight against a woman's right to bodily autonomy. If you break it down into two component parts - the embryo and the woman - the man has rights when it comes to the embryo, but doesn't have any right when it comes to the woman. In the case of frozen embryos, a man can refuse/permit an embryo to be implanted, but he cannot insist that the woman carry it. I would still largely support a system of "abortion" that allows a man to permanently forgo all parental rights and obligations to a pregnancy, but that doesn't mean the opposite - a system which forces someone to become a parent - should be allowed to exist.
would allow a potential father to legally abdicate his responsibility toward the child up to the 18th week of a woman's pregnancy. The man would lose any rights to visit the child but also would not pay any child support he may otherwise be required to contribute.
MayoSalmon wrote: » A womans right to choose supersedes a mans right to choose concerning their own child basically
drunkmonkey wrote: » Your both married, do you think you should have no right to challenge that decision?
Daniel Long Duct wrote: » We should have the male abortion option, which For equalities sake we need this option.
seamus wrote: » No. If I can't reason with her, then obviously there are serious questions to be asked about our future together.But there's no logical scenario in which I should be allowed to try and force her to carry the pregnancy to term. There is no "win" in the scenario you posit, no good outcome for anyone.
MayoSalmon wrote: » Is it not selfish of the woman to have an abortion in this instance when she knows the baby/child soon to be adult would have a life...
MayoSalmon wrote: » The woman does not want the baby hence the abortion yet in the same scenario the man might. The man is willing to raise the child can sign whatever legal documents etc etc. Is it not selfish of the woman to have an abortion in this instance when she knows the baby/child soon to be adult would have a life...
Triceratops Ballet wrote: » It's no more selfish to not have a child when you don't want one than it is to have a child when you do want one. Both actions serve your individual desires.
MayoSalmon wrote: » The future child's/adults desires are whats primarily being served in the form of life