T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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732.1 | | MSBCS::YANNEKIS | | Thu Jan 23 1992 15:30 | 25 |
|
I'll bite
>
> .... males' lack of choice in abortion decisions.
>
As someone who is solidly pro-choice this is close to one that drives
me nuts.
I do not believe a spouse's approval should be needed but I do think a
spouse (I like to see father .. spouse or not) should at least be
informed before an abortion occurs.
I do not understand how anyone can believe it is fair for a man
1) to be repsonsible for 50% of the care of a child (if s/he is brought
to term) and at the same time
2) not even have the right to know such a responsibility is on the horizon.
My 2 cents,
Greg
|
732.2 | a major problem | CSC32::HADDOCK | I'm afraid I'm paranoid | Thu Jan 23 1992 15:36 | 34 |
| > Disenfranchised dads have been yelping for years about spawning
>issues: unequal child custody, visitation, and support, the lack of safe
>birth control for males, and males' lack of choice in abortion decisions.
>But new groups are starting to look at the bigger picture.
Custody and visitation as well as child support have long been
overlooked as a *child's* right as well as a man's right. The
non_custodial_parent *should* pay child support. The dead-beats
hurt the ones who really *do* care by providing justification for
unjustice against all. The theft of a child's "support" by the
custodial parent is wide spread and dispicable although no
"government studies" have been provided to provide those all
important statistics. Some form of accunting is needed, and a
method of determining child support amounts must be found that
will allow the non-custodial parent to maintain a decent standard
of living as well as provide the child a decent living.
Only in the last year have I started seeing some cracks in the
"the only thing fathers are good for is money" dogma, and
have started seeing some recognition that fathers are indeed a
valuable and necessary part of a child's life and upbringing.
I believe that "no-fault" divorce has been the biggest fraud
perpetrated on men in this century. This is a big area where
some of the injustices agains women were removed while the
injustices agains men have been untouched or increased as a
result. The time when a man and his *children* could be separated
from each other by force if necessary and most of his income confiscated
and given to someone who has no acountability for the way that
the money is spent supposedly went out with the Emancipation
Proclimation. Yes it is not *all* that way, but there *are*
all too many cases of this for which absolutely nothing is done.
fred();
|
732.3 | | WMOIS::REINKE_B | seals and mergansers | Thu Jan 23 1992 15:49 | 17 |
| Greg,
One simple solution to the problem is for no man to have sexual
relations with a woman unless he personally uses a contraceptive
or the two of them have become *very* clear about how both
of them feel about the possibility of children.
If a woman is violent anti abortion, then she should be able
to support any child she conceives in reasonable comfort. Part of
the responsibility for this support should be from the father.
She is however, I think, morally obliged to be sure that said
support goes to rent, clothing, food etc that supports the child
(no more than 1/2 the rent for example).
Bonnie
Bonnie
|
732.4 | If you don't want a child, don't make one | ESGWST::RDAVIS | You have grape | Thu Jan 23 1992 15:52 | 28 |
| > I do not understand how anyone can believe it is fair for a man
>
> 1) to be repsonsible for 50% of the care of a child (if s/he is brought
> to term) and at the same time
>
> 2) not even have the right to know such a responsibility is on the horizon.
Theoretically, I tend to agree, but only because my pro-abortion stance
borders on lunatic fringe.
Practically, as long as there are feelings against abortion as a means
of birth control, the situation is inherently unfair, since a woman may
come to term without having planned her pregnancy and without being
able to support the child alone.
A requirement to notify the probable father-to-be if known raises the
question "What's the point?" If he's for aborting the fetus and she's
not, too bad, it's her body; if he's for forcing her to give birth, I
can only hope that he doesn't have the power. If they're not talking
anyway, it doesn't matter much whether they agree on the proper course
of action.
This is a financial reason for men using birth control. Women have
both financial and health reasons, and I think theirs are harder to
escape from, especially if they have problems choosing or obtaining an
abortion.
Ray
|
732.5 | | GOOEY::BENNISON | Victor L. Bennison DTN 381-2156 ZK2-3/R56 | Thu Jan 23 1992 16:53 | 9 |
| > 1) to be repsonsible for 50% of the care of a child (if s/he is brought
> to term) and at the same time
>
> 2) not even have the right to know such a responsibility is on the horizon.
If the woman's going to have the fetus aborted how is there any
responsibility on the horizon?
- Vick
|
732.6 | | TRODON::SIMPSON | Lock them into Open Systems! | Fri Jan 24 1992 00:18 | 12 |
| re .2
> I believe that "no-fault" divorce has been the biggest fraud
> perpetrated on men in this century. This is a big area where
> some of the injustices agains women were removed while the
> injustices agains men have been untouched or increased as a
> result. The time when a man and his *children* could be separated
You are hopeless confusing effects with causes. Australian divorce law went
no-fault in 1976. Today, about 50% of men who contest for custody win.
Ergo, no-fault divorce as such cannot be blamed for the peculiarities evident
in the PRM.
|
732.7 | back to the U.S.A. | CSC32::HADDOCK | I'm afraid I'm paranoid | Fri Jan 24 1992 10:03 | 21 |
| re .6
In the good ol' USofA however, *contested* custody awards still
go about 9-1 in favor of the woman. Latest trump card--Accuse
him of physical and/or sexual abuse. The judge will usually take
the "lets not take a chance that she's lying" approach. ( No Susan,
I can't quote chapter and verse of the stats). Most men don't even
bother to try this very expensive legal adventure unless they have
a *very* good case and can get past their lawyer's "advice". Most
lawyers will advise a man against going for custody, and the cases
where a lawyer will stand up to the system happen only on TV.
Given the current divorce rate, in America, if you have children,
you only have about a 49% chance of being there to see them grow up.
There is absolutely *nothing* besides *her* good will that keeps
you from being kicked out of your house, her moving her "SO" into
your bed, and *you* being forced to finance the whole thing through
"child support". Can you say Emancipation Proclamation??
fred();
|
732.8 | It's tough to contest in the US | DEBUG::SCHULDT | As Incorrect as they come... | Fri Jan 24 1992 12:48 | 15 |
| re .6 -- about 50% of men who contest custody win....
I dunno how Australia works, but I didn't even _think_ of contesting
custody here in the US when I got my divorce! Maybe 50% of contested
cases could be won by men here, too, but that would be because only
(I'm pulling a number out of the air here; don't ask for sources!) < 5%
of divorce cases involve contested custody. A man has to have a pretty
ironclad case proving that the mother is unfit (NOT that he would be a
better parent!) before he can even think of successfully contesting.
Can you provide some more info about the percentage of total
custody cases that are contested? I think it would shed a lot of light
on the subject...thanks
larry
|
732.9 | percentages | CSC32::HADDOCK | I'm afraid I'm paranoid | Fri Jan 24 1992 13:51 | 11 |
| Again I can't quote this chaper and verse, but in the U.S.A. about
50% of marriages end in divorce. Most usually in the first 5 or 10
years. Of those cases only about 10% involve contested custody.
Of the contested cases only about 10% are won by the father. In
the last couple of years, I have seen more cases where the mother
does not contest divorce, but I believe that that is still a
*statistically* insignificant number. So my .7 should have said
51% instead of 49% chance of being around to watch your child
grow up.
fred();
|
732.10 | .9 the average is 7 yrs per marriage. | AIMHI::RAUH | Home of The Cruel Spa | Fri Jan 24 1992 14:05 | 1 |
|
|
732.11 | | MSBCS::YANNEKIS | | Mon Jan 27 1992 14:01 | 24 |
|
>
> One simple solution to the problem is for no man to have sexual
> relations with a woman unless he personally uses a contraceptive
> or the two of them have become *very* clear about how both
> of them feel about the possibility of children.
>
Doesn't guarentee anything. We could use 5 types of birth control
simultaneously and have a legal contract signed with witnesses
describing the outcome of an unplanned pregnancy (in my case I adopt
the baby).
If an unplanned pregnancy occurred the women *could* say ... forget it
... I'll get an abortion and I won't tell Greg.
I'm not asking to choose; I'm asking to know. The only way I can be
sure to know is to abstain. Which sounds a hell of a lot like a
pro-life argument ... if you're not willing to risk the consequences
then abstain; that is your choice.
Greg
|
732.12 | | TRODON::SIMPSON | Lock them into Open Systems! | Mon Jan 27 1992 20:31 | 6 |
| re .8 (Larry)
I don't know the percentage of cases in which men contest. I strongly
suspect that most of the time the men don't contest. My point was simply to
demonstrate that no-fault divorce per se is not to blame for the various
inequities obvious in the PRM system.
|
732.13 | no-fault | CSC32::HADDOCK | I'm afraid I'm paranoid | Mon Jan 27 1992 20:51 | 17 |
| re .12
My point about no-fault was that before no-fault, it was much harder
for either party to cut-and-run. If she did something really stupid,
it was harder for her to come back on him for custody, support, etc.
However, no-fault for all practical purposes means that woman has
no-fault. Now the man/father gets it stuck to him no matter who
breaks up the marriage. The only limiting factor is *her* ethics.
If she takes a wild hair to take off or kick him out and move her
boyfriend in, there isn't diddly he can do about it but get ready
to start paying "child support" and/or "spousal support".
I didn't say that no-fault was to blame. I said that it was an
example of how the "abuses" agains women were addressed while
the "abuses" against men were left untouched.
fred();
|
732.14 | lack of motivation?? | CSC32::HADDOCK | I'm afraid I'm paranoid | Mon Jan 27 1992 21:07 | 17 |
|
On second thought maybe no-fault *is* to balame to a certain extent.
I am not talking about the really abusive cases here or cases
where he really *is* a <bleep>. I'm thinking of the wild-hair-up-
her-<bleep> cases, but I wonder how many cases there would be where
*she* was more willing to try to stay and work out the problems
of the marriage if she knew that *she* may loose everything she
had worked for all her life and spend the next 18 or so years
being forced to work then having most of her paycheck confiscated
for "child support".
Not much incentive to work things out if she can get the kids, the
house, the car, the savings, and most of his future income and eat
her cake too.
fred();
|
732.15 | | WMOIS::REINKE_B | seals and mergansers | Tue Jan 28 1992 14:17 | 13 |
| in re .11
A recent article about abortion mentioned that in over half of all
abortions the couple involved used *no* birth control. It appears
to me that consciencious use of birth control would seriously reduce
the number of unwanted pregnancies.
I can recall went I was in college and it was nearly impossible to
obtain contraceptives, (even condoms). I find it absolutely appalling
that with contraceptives so easily available, and with STDs and
AIDS such a serious problems that people don't use them.
Bonnie
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732.16 | | STARCH::WHALEN | Vague clouds of electrons tunneling through computer circuits an | Sun Feb 09 1992 10:52 | 12 |
| On NPR's Sunday morning radio program I heard Gloria Steinham say the
following:
"20 years ago (the leap forward) was to show that women can do what
men can do, now the leap forward is to show that men can do what women
can do."
This was followed by a discussion on parenting.
Perhaps making this leap forward would do a lot to help this problem.
Rich
|