T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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822.1 | men NEVER have to make babies... | FORTSC::WILDE | why am I not yet a dragon? | Tue Aug 18 1992 14:52 | 26 |
| if a man truly doesn't want children he can prevent them...the keyword is
HE. When a man depends upon a woman who wants a child to use birth control
because he doesn't like using a condom...well, a little silly, don't you
think??? If he has not prevented the pregnancy, and the woman does not
choose to abort, then he has put himself into the position of helping to
bring a dependent life into being and he must take his responsibility to
support that life. If he fails to do so, the child suffers and that is
unacceptable.
Women choose to have babies because they feel a need to be a mother. In
most cases I've known, the woman doesn't want a child WITHOUT a life partner
to help her rear the offspring...she simply hasn't found a life partner and
she feels the pressure of the "biological clock" - so she chooses to have
her child without a partner. Let us remember that men can reproduce as
long as they can ejaculate....women have a short reproductive life and
if they are going to make a contribution to the next generation, they
pretty much have to get it taken care of by the time they are 40...for
some women, the period of fertility can be even shorter. If a woman finds
herself facing life childless or without a life partner, she will choose
whichever is most important to her.
Again, I wish to stress, a man NEVER has to have an unwanted child...all he
has to do is take responsibility for birth control himself. A properly
used condom is so effective as to make pregnancy virtually impossible....
and they protect you from AIDS better than anything else going. A very
good reason to use them, don't you think?
|
822.2 | A nit, I suppose... | DSSDEV::BENNISON | Vick Bennison 381-2156 ZKO2-2/O23 | Tue Aug 18 1992 14:58 | 7 |
| >Let us remember that men can reproduce as
>long as they can ejaculate....women have a short reproductive life and
Ahem. A few of us ejaculatory men here are permanently
non-reproductive.
- Vick
|
822.3 | Some "equal rights" are a little more equal than others | CSC32::HADDOCK | Don't Tell My Achy-Breaky Back | Tue Aug 18 1992 15:08 | 8 |
|
This was beat to death a few notes back. Basically there is no
difference legally in the three options. Once she gets pregnant,
he is totally at her mercy as far as any decision to 1) have abortion,
2) give baby up for adoption, 3) Keep baby and make him pay
"child support" for the next 20 years.
fred();
|
822.4 | A word of caution here... | SMURF::BINDER | Ut aperies opera | Tue Aug 18 1992 15:14 | 9 |
| Re: .0
By what leap of faith do you determine that a child has the RIGHT to
two loving parents? In most species, this is decidedly not the case;
for many, the child's rights include NO loving parents. Please don't
foist your moral prejudgments off on others who don't necessarily agree
with you.
-dick
|
822.5 | Speaking of moral rights... | CSC32::HADDOCK | Don't Tell My Achy-Breaky Back | Tue Aug 18 1992 15:42 | 11 |
| re .4
> Please don't
> foist your moral prejudgments off on others who don't necessarily agree
> with you.
Then would you consider "child support" a "moral right" of the child?
fred();
|
822.6 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Tue Aug 18 1992 16:07 | 10 |
| I consider all three cases in the base note the same as far as equal
responsibility goes. As others have said, if a man doesn't want a child, he
must take measures to prevent conception. The most foolproof, of course,
is to abstain from sex. Other measures have differing degrees of effectiveness,
and therefore, risk.
I have no sympathy for the man who takes inadequate precautions and then
whines about being held responsible for the child he fathered.
Steve
|
822.7 | | SMURF::BINDER | Ut aperies opera | Tue Aug 18 1992 16:21 | 9 |
| Re: .5
There is a vast difference between a legal right (child support) and a
moral right (love). The fact that the two often intersect is not
really germane to the establishment of either. But this begins to look
like the definition of violence in the rape/violence topic; I think
I'll withdraw from another such rathole.
-dick
|
822.8 | laws and morality | CSC32::HADDOCK | Don't Tell My Achy-Breaky Back | Tue Aug 18 1992 16:37 | 15 |
|
re .7
They're all "moral" issues. From "murder one" right on down.
Laws are just institutionalized morality. If I expanded on your
exmple in .3, then in some societies vengence-killing (which would
get you murder-one in our society) is considered not only moral,
but a "duty".
I think what .0 was talking about is that, in our society, were
both parents are alive and accessable, the the child has a right
to access to both parents. Is not "visitation" a legal right
of the child as well as the parent?
fred();
|
822.9 | Relationships are built on Trust IMHO | PCCAD::DINGELDEIN | PHOENIX | Tue Aug 18 1992 17:16 | 16 |
| Thanks Fred.
RE: .1
What gives a woman the right to bring children into the world against
the wishes of the father. Children need a family to grow from. The last
time I checked a family starts with mom and dad. Many married couples
plan their families and attempt to avoid more children. Some statistics
I've seen show about half of the abortions in the U.S. are married
woman with kids. I'm assuming these woman understand the committment
and resources necessary to raise kids and are not willing to bring them
into a world without the committed love of two parents. Accidents
happen to anyone. Do you truly think all married couples use condoms?
dan d
|
822.10 | this can of worms already opened in 733 | VMSSG::NICHOLS | Conferences are like apple barrels... | Tue Aug 18 1992 17:36 | 4 |
| re .9
facriseaches
that has already been beaten to death in 733
|
822.11 | | RAVEN1::AAGESEN | the only constant is change | Tue Aug 18 1992 18:28 | 5 |
|
�The last time I checked a family starts with mom and dad.
um, how long has it been since you checked? mid `50's p'haps?
|
822.12 | Keep the scales level | PCCAD::DINGELDEIN | PHOENIX | Tue Aug 18 1992 18:36 | 15 |
| RE: .10
Didn't know about 733. Take a while to go through 300 replies but I'll
browse through.
A freind of mine got stung bigtime. Had a notorized agreement from a
woman who wanted to "keep the baby" basically releasing him from
obligation to her. Three years later he's dragged into court under a
paternity suite filed by the DOR. Judge threw the agreement out because
the lawyer argued she signed it under duress. Nailed him with the
standard 25%. This sort of thing just pisses me off! Especially when
someone is forthright and gets screwed anyway. As I see it his rights
where superceded by the state, the woman and the child. Don't get me
wrong about kids. I love them dearly. There's just got to be a limit
somewhere and I'm trying to get a feel for social concious.
dan d
|
822.13 | but this ISN'T about the woman | FORTSC::WILDE | why am I not yet a dragon? | Tue Aug 18 1992 23:06 | 28 |
| >> There's just got to be a limit
>> somewhere and I'm trying to get a feel for social concious.
There IS a limit....don't participate in paternity and you won't get
"stung". The only way to avoid getting "stung" (charming word for
being asked to support your offspring), is to NOT MAKE ANYONE
PREGNANT...or to donate your sperm to a sperm bank and then you
know you MAY have offspring out there somewhere - but, you'll
never see them. If a man allows himself to be seduced/bought
into the process of creating life, then he must expect to be
"stung". The laws are not written to give the WOMAN some advantage,
but to PROVIDE FOR THE CHILD. If the woman intended to raise,
and pay for, the child herself and then found she was unable to
do a satisfactory job of it for any reason...the child STILL needs
support...and the father of the child is expected to pay that support.
The lesson remains the same...if you are not willing to pay, don't
play - certainly NOT without protection that YOU PROVIDE.
Children are dependent upon their parents - it isn't their "fault"
that someone gets "stung" for their support - it is the responsibility
of both parents to understand that once the child is born, there
are no "breaks" - the child's needs override any of the parents
preferences.
Your friend got nailed because he looked upon the "transaction"
as a business deal - something he could walk away from at will.
That was his SECOND mistake...
|
822.14 | | IAMOK::KELLY | | Wed Aug 19 1992 10:22 | 19 |
| I have a problem with telling men that ifthey want to play,
it's up to them to make sure there is no resulting pregnancy.
Assuming 2 mature adults in a relationship, at the beginning,
neither wants kids. THey agree to a method of birthcontrol and
in this case, the woman chooses to take on that responsibility.
Further down the line, she changes her mind about children and
knows the mate hasn't. She accidently gets pregnant,expecting
that when it happens, he'll be different about it. Thats a
clear violation of trust in the relationship and frankly, I don't
think that a father in such a case must be held responsible. THe
best thing to have done IMO, if she changed her mind,, but he
didn't, end the relationship and find someone who wants the same
thing you do.
IN a case where the man does take the responsibility for BC, I
would say that if it failed, he does have a responsibility to the
child, but not in a situation where his trust of his partner was
taken advantage of.
|
822.15 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Wed Aug 19 1992 11:18 | 10 |
| Re: .14
I can understand your point of view, but what it really comes down to
is that if either member of the couple does not want children, they
should take the necessary steps to make sure that a child is
not conceived. If they choose to do that by relying on the other
partner, that's ok, but they have to understand that they no longer
control the matter and must live with the consequences.
Steve
|
822.16 | | IAMOK::KELLY | | Wed Aug 19 1992 11:38 | 9 |
| re: .15
Steve,
I'll concede your point about relying on the other partner and thus
living with the consequences of an *accident*, but even though it may
be rare, it sticks in my gut when one partner completely deceived the
other for the express purposes of going against agreed to wishes. If
only this were a perfect world :-).
|
822.17 | What;s fair to everyone? | PCCAD::DINGELDEIN | PHOENIX | Wed Aug 19 1992 11:44 | 5 |
| re: .14
IMO all relatioships are built on trust. I agree with you. I also agree
with a lot of you folks about the childs needs and being dependent on
the parents.
So, how do you handle the situation?
|
822.18 | | VMSSPT::NICHOLS | Conferences are like apple barrels... | Wed Aug 19 1992 11:58 | 11 |
| <A freind of mine got stung bigtime. Had a notorized agreement from a
<woman who wanted to "keep the baby" basically releasing him from
<obligation to her. Three years later he's dragged into court under a
<paternity suite filed by the DOR. Judge threw the agreement out because
<the lawyer argued she signed it under duress.
Without taking sides on this, it would strike me as very reasonable if
the Judge had thrown out the agreement because his interpretation
of the relevant laws was that society has a responsibility to defend
the child; a responsibility that supercedes and transcends and makes
moot any agreement reached between the birth father and birth mother.
|
822.19 | | HEYYOU::ZARLENGA | rotate your tires, Cindy? | Wed Aug 19 1992 13:00 | 7 |
| .15> partner, that's ok, but they have to understand that they no longer
.15> control the matter and must live with the consequences.
Steve, what of the case where the man is using birth control, but
secretly wants children, and gets the woman pregnant?
Must she "live with the consequences?"
|
822.20 | | HEYYOU::ZARLENGA | rotate your tires, Cindy? | Wed Aug 19 1992 13:04 | 10 |
| re:13
That outlook is a bit one-sided.
In the event of a pregnancy, regardless of the path that led there,
the potential mother holds all the cards. She can abort or not. She
can go after child support or not.
The potential father's options are a bit more limited. He can become
a deadbeat dad or not. Period. Nice choices.
|
822.21 | What is Fair??? | PCCAD::DINGELDEIN | PHOENIX | Wed Aug 19 1992 14:26 | 12 |
| There is no deterent for a woman other than her own concious and sense
of responsibility.
To create a deterent such as denying her acces to public assistance is
to deny the child adequate care. To exempt the father from
responsibility places the government in the role of caretaker. To
offset cost the government creates a hierarchy of rights and defines
the childs rights as primary. Thus the closed loop.
I see no resolution, only damage control.
Is there a humane deterent such as allowing the father a choice of
custody or pay child support? Suggestions please.
dan d
|
822.22 | | CSC32::M_EVANS | hate is not a family value | Wed Aug 19 1992 16:48 | 20 |
| I back Steve up here. If you really don't want kids, take your own
birth control responsibility. If you are a man and don't want kids,
use a condom, insert your partner's diaphram, cap, foam, or what have
you, or be sweet enough to hand her her pill every morning or evening,
or when ever her schedule says to take it. Better yet, if you are
certain you never want children get a vasectomy and get your sperm
count rechecked yearly. If you have a maybe problem, you at least can
bank your sperm before a vasectomy and keep it frozen in case you
change your mind at a later date.
If you are female and don't want kids use your bc method of choice, and
put his condom on for him if need be. If he won't use one and that was
an agreement before hand, don't continue to intercourse, stop right
there and leave the area if possible. when you both cool down, discuss
why he doesn't want to use one any more.
In this way, accidental pregnancies will be only due to BC failure. If
this seems like too much trouble, go celibate, or solo.
Meg
|
822.23 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Wed Aug 19 1992 16:56 | 16 |
| I realize that part of my position was confusing. I had meant to say that when
a child is conceived, it is the responsibility of BOTH the parents. If you
want zero risk of conceiving a child, abstain from sex. (Vasectomies are
not 100% effective in all cases, though they, along with tubal ligation are
close enough to 100% for most people.) If you are willing to accept non-zero
risk then be prepared to take the responsibility if conception happens.
I suppose I should also point out that "responsibility" does not mean "control
over whether the child is brought to term", in my view. The woman has (and
should have) that control.
As for signed agreements absolving one parent or the other of responsibility,
it's pretty clear that our legal system takes a dim view of such agreements,
especially if one parent starts asking for financial assistance from the state.
Steve
|
822.24 | | CSC32::M_EVANS | hate is not a family value | Wed Aug 19 1992 17:22 | 8 |
| Steve,
That is why I recommended having a sperm count done yearly. This at
least further minimizes the risk of an unplanned pregnancy due to
vasectomy failure, (those tubes can grow back).
meg
|
822.25 | | PCCAD::DINGELDEIN | PHOENIX | Wed Aug 19 1992 17:57 | 15 |
| Everything being said here is quite relevant and honorable. The advice
regarding avoiding the potential problem is well taken.
But..
Married and unmarried couples do choose to use other birth control
methods other than condoms. Even condoms slide off in the heat of
passion. It does happen! Beleive it or not there are people who lie and
deceive to attain selfish goals in life and I feel that there has to be
a deterent to make woman think twice about "gene hunting" behavior.
This argument about a woman choosing whether to carry a pregnancy to
term is totally her decision because it's her body is ok only if the
man has a right to choose whether he wants the child.
If the woman decides to go forward without his consent then what
recourse does the man have? Legal release of obligation is the only
answer I can come up with under this circumstance. Ideas?
|
822.26 | ah the good ol land of "equal" rights | CSC32::HADDOCK | Don't Tell My Achy-Breaky Back | Wed Aug 19 1992 18:45 | 30 |
|
Re provide your own protection:
A major factor in "relationships" involves "trust". Unless you
have already had a vasectomy before the relationship started and
if you start providing your own "protection" above what she
says she is already providing, you are going to be in for some
major "relationship" problems. (ie "Gee I don't think you really
_trust_ me").
re condoms:
Unless you opt for the vasectomy, about your only choice is condoms.
Maybe foam or jelly which are next best thing to nothing. Condoms
are also only about 80% effective by themselves. Less if they've
been carried around for a while. Condoms and foam/jelly together
are almost 100% effective, but then we get back to the "trust" thing.
re vasectomy:
If you are already married, in most states you need your wife's
consent to get a vasectomy. She on the other hand can get
her tubes tied or even an abortion without even letting you
know that it happened. Let alone consent.
re abstinence:
I brought up the idea a few notes back that this might be a
good idea for women too, and I got thoroughly trashed for it.
fred();
|
822.27 | it may not be fair, but how else to do it? | FORTSC::WILDE | why am I not yet a dragon? | Wed Aug 19 1992 19:50 | 44 |
| look, guys, the way it is may not be "fair" by your interpretation, but
due to our physiology and the method by which the human animal reproduces,
this is the way it is....
women get pregnant. Men don't. once a woman is pregnant, HER body is
involved 100% with the process of bringing that life into the world...she
is the one who "pays" a real physical price for the pregnancy. She is
the one who lactates - thereby creating the food the infant needs to
thrive. Yes, the child can live without nursing on mother's milk, but
not as well. So, she gets to decide if she is willing to commit her
body and LIFE to the process. Fair? Maybe not, but unless women become
property again, it is the way it is.
Men make women pregnant. If a man doesn't want to make a woman pregnant,
HE should take responsibility for making sure he doesn't. Period. Don't
leave it up to someone else and then cry "cheat!" when it doesn't happen
the way you want. That is childish. As a responsible adult, YOU take
responsibility for what you don't want to happen. If she is also a
responsible, honest adult, then you BOTH take precautions...and thereby
reduce the possibility of mistakes even further.
Once a child is born...the needs of the child OVERRIDE your need to not
feel "cheated", the woman's need to feel independent, or anything else
you can name. Once the child is born, you, the biological parents are
responsible for financial support...if you choose to cheat yourself and
the child of emotional support, it is your choice. It is not, however,
your choice to fail to suppor the child. It is not the woman's choice
to fail to take care of the child or insure that someone competent to
do so takes care of the child...obviously, if the man is unhappy about
paying support for the child and feels cheated by this, he isn't a
real comforting candidate for custodian of the child. That leaves the
woman as the custodian of the child.
Or, perhaps, you would prefer for the man to be able to force the woman
to give the child up for adoption??? Not very likely scenario, given the
amount of physical, emotional (hormonal, for the scientists among us)
impact the child has had on the woman by the time the child is born.
That is a bond that can lead sane women to commit murder to protect
their offspring. I doubt a legal court would mandate such an act
for anything short of criminal neglect or abuse.
It isn't "fair"?...probably not...but it IS. If you don't want to be
"trapped", MAKE SURE YOU AREN'T. IF you didn't "make sure"...be ready
to pay.
|
822.28 | | MILKWY::ZARLENGA | rotate your tires, Cindy? | Wed Aug 19 1992 20:11 | 8 |
| Well, if you're really interested in being fair, we could allow the guy
to relinquish any connections to the child, financial or otherwise, just
like we already allow the mother to, by aborting.
That is, if you want to be fair.
If you want to be able to throw the guy in jail, then by all means, let's
just keep it like it is now.
|
822.29 | | PCCAD::DINGELDEIN | PHOENIX | Thu Aug 20 1992 10:23 | 7 |
| re: .27
The only way a man can "make a woman pregnant" is to rape her. All
other sexuallity is by consent.
This attitude creates a sense of "victim" for the woman. "He made me
pregnant so now it's up to me to decide what to do about being
victimized. You bring an unwanted child into the world under the
present system and you truly do victimize.
|
822.30 | | DSSDEV::BENNISON | Vick Bennison 381-2156 ZKO2-2/O23 | Thu Aug 20 1992 11:07 | 11 |
| >re vasectomy:
>If you are already married, in most states you need your wife's
>consent to get a vasectomy. She on the other hand can get
>her tubes tied or even an abortion without even letting you
>know that it happened. Let alone consent.
This is most assuredly not true in New Hampshire. In fact, there are
statutes that say that a medical facility CANNOT require such consent
or advisement of the spouse.
- Vick
|
822.31 | | CSC32::M_EVANS | hate is not a family value | Thu Aug 20 1992 12:08 | 21 |
| If people don't like condoms, I did add other alternatives. You can
make insetion of diaphrams, caps and/or foam into a part of foreplay.
You lovingly share the responsibility of the ritual of "the pill"
every morning or everning, you can check for "the string" of an iud as
a part of foreplay if you are fortunate enough to live in a country
where iud's are still available.
As for the trust issue, well it isn't an issue. If you don't want to
risk being an involuntary parent, you take precautions. "honey, we
agreed that we don't want kids at this time and a condom decreases the
chances that the method we are using will fail." Simple loving and
trusting. Of course if you can't stand to use a condom correctly; yes,
I do mean read the instructions and follow them; and you don't want to
be sterilized, you are taking your chances. Diaphrams are
approximately 80% effective, which means of every 100 users, 20 are
likely to get pregnant over the year, PROPER use of a condom in
conjunction with a diaphram decreases that risk to less than 2% about
the same risk as the pill without the dangers of the pill to our
partner, you really do love her don't you?
Meg
|
822.32 | are you sure it was so sinisterly planned? | FORTSC::WILDE | why am I not yet a dragon? | Thu Aug 20 1992 14:10 | 54 |
| re: my comment about the man 'making' the woman pregnant...
in a biological sense, pregnancy is impossible without the contribution
of the sperm from a man. The woman carries the ova with her at all
times, but she isn't pregnant until the man makes his contribution to
the process. i was not implying that the woman is a VICTIM of
the process...however, she IS the primary carrier of the result. Men
can contribute sperm and walk away....women don't have that option.
They must invest a great deal of their own physical health in the
process. Their only other option, once pregnancy has occurred, is
abortion.
The real problem here is that the man has a vastly different level of
emotional and physical committment demanded of him during this process.
There is an inequity built into the reproductive process for humans which
we cannot change (at least not until the gene-splicers get much better
at their jobs)....it is a hideous concept to give a man CONTROL of a
woman's body - that is tantamount to slavery and enlightened humans
simply won't tolerate that...yet, if a man is allowed to force a woman to
abort because he DOESN'T want a child, or to force a woman to carry a
pregnancy to term because he DOES want a child, that is what you have..slavery.
So you are left with the fact that the woman must retain control of her
own body - and that means she, and only she, decides if she will invest
the physical commitment to bring a pregnancy to term.
The idea that a man can "sign-off" any obligation to the child, once born,
may sound wonderful to a man with an unwanted child bearing his genes, but
it certainly doesn't do the child any good. That is really what is
happening here...the CHILD needs the money, not the woman. The child
bears no guilt in this process. Regardless of your feelings about the woman's
motives and behavior, you cannot punish the child for them. The court
decided that once a man has contributed to the creation of this life,
he must take responsibility for maintenance of the child. It isn't the
child's fault that the man contributed sperm when he really didn't mean it...
the man is an adult and he knows what he was doing. The knowlege of
risk is implicit in the choice to have sex. Are you saying that even if
all precautions were taken and something failed - if the pregnancy was
truly a mistake (and i have only your word that it WASN'T an unplanned
accident), that the man shouldn't be obligated to pay because he didn't
INTEND to become a father? Well, hey, maybe the woman didn't INTEND to
become a mother, but, upon finding herself pregnant, determined that she
could NOT bring herself to have an abortion....maybe, just maybe, she then
decided to do what she HAD to do within her own moral context and brought
the pregnancy to term...and became a mother....has that thought crossed
your mind? And maybe, just maybe, she finds that she cannot get a good
job because mothers with young children are often NOT hired because they
will have to spend so much time taking care of childhood illnesses and
taking time off when the baby-sitter isn't coming, and....did that thought
ever cross your mind? NO? Well, maybe, just maybe, you should think a
little more....
This is not rocket science here. We all know where babies come from.
Prevent them or take responsibility...and when a baby happens in SPITE
of you - well, thems the breaks!
|
822.33 | | PCCAD::DINGELDEIN | PHOENIX | Thu Aug 20 1992 15:05 | 10 |
| The issue here is how to create deterent to deception without punishing
the child and/or the man.
I have empathy for all mothers married or not because I am a single
parent (divorced-widowed).
The woman can say "NO" to sex as well as a man.
This can go on indefinately.
Is there a policy that can attain fairness?
|
822.34 | | RIPPLE::KENNEDY_KA | Winds of Change | Thu Aug 20 1992 17:32 | 5 |
| re .33
Yeah, it was said in .32.
Karen
|
822.35 | Nit | SMURF::BINDER | Ut aperies opera | Thu Aug 20 1992 17:54 | 7 |
| Re: .32
A man is not biologically required to make a woman pregnant. The fact
that moral outrage would ensue if parthenogenesis were practiced by
women does not negate the fact that parthenogenesis is a real thing.
-dick
|
822.36 | the pill WILL fail if... | FORTSC::WILDE | why am I not yet a dragon? | Thu Aug 20 1992 18:40 | 23 |
|
> A man is not biologically required to make a woman pregnant. The fact
> that moral outrage would ensue if parthenogenesis were practiced by
> women does not negate the fact that parthenogenesis is a real thing.
except in rare cases where a person carries reproductive organs from both
sexes, I have no idea what you can mean....sperm is required for reproduction.
Even Artificial Insemination uses sperm from the male of the species.....
In true cases where the person is biologically hermaphrodite, pregnancies
have occurred...however this is SO rare it isn't even a blip on the
charts of human evolution...so, I ask - without male sperm where else/how
else is the ovum fertilized?
FOR GENERAL INFORMATION:
one important fact concering the "theory of deception" being touted here...
are any of you aware that if a woman is taking certain antibiotics the
birth control pill is rendered ineffective??? I'd bet that most of you
are not aware of this...and most women are not informed of this. However,
it is true. Many cases of "she said she was using protection, but look now!"
are due to the fact that she WAS using protection - and taking the pills
her doctor prescribed to fight an infection.
|
822.37 | NO | SALSA::MOELLER | Uwaki na Bokura | Thu Aug 20 1992 22:11 | 9 |
| Yes, well, certain persons in here continue to dodge the original
premise/question : Does the male have responsibility if the woman
deliberately becomes pregnant against his wishes ?
No fair saying "FIRST, he should've..."
YES or NO
karl
|
822.38 | not 18 years' worth, anyway... | MILKWY::ZARLENGA | Quayle in '94! | Thu Aug 20 1992 22:51 | 4 |
| .37> Does the male have responsibility if the woman deliberately becomes
.37> pregnant against his wishes ?
He does, but he shouldn't.
|
822.39 | each partner takes responsibility for bc | LUNER::MACKINNON | | Fri Aug 21 1992 08:41 | 12 |
|
re .33
>is there a policy that can attain fairness?
Each partner takes responsibility for birth control. Seems
pretty fair to me and far less likely chances for bc failure.
I agree with some of the previous notes. If a man does not
want a child ONLY HE can be responsible for ensuring that.
Same goes for the woman. If she does not want a child ONLY SHE
can be responsible for ensuring that. Same action for
both partners seems pretty fair.
|
822.40 | once your brought into this world | LUNER::MACKINNON | | Fri Aug 21 1992 08:44 | 8 |
|
re. 37
If a child is born BOTH parents have responsibility to care
for it emotionally, physically and financially. The manner
in which the child was concieved is of no relevance once
the child is born.
|
822.41 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | the dangerous type | Fri Aug 21 1992 09:26 | 21 |
| >There is an inequity built into the reproductive process for humans which
>we cannot change
Absolutely correct.
>it is a hideous concept to give a man CONTROL of a woman's body
Agreed.
>yet, if a man is allowed to force a woman to
>abort because he DOESN'T want a child, or to force a woman to carry a
>pregnancy to term because he DOES want a child, that is what you have..slavery.
Yep.
>So you are left with the fact that the woman must retain control of her
>own body - and that means she, and only she, decides if she will invest
>the physical commitment to bring a pregnancy to term.
And having this control, she and only she must accept the responsibility
that this entails.
|
822.42 | | IAMOK::KELLY | | Fri Aug 21 1992 10:56 | 24 |
| re: -1
Agreed.
I think one aspect of the issue not being addressed here is when
the man DOES want the child and the woman doesnt'..there is an
inherant unfairness in the reproductive process and I think while
there are many men who agree with the idea of "woman's body, woman's
choice", but in reality it's "woman's body, woman's choice, but we
can force the man to to go along with whatever *our* choice is.
Somebody made refernece to the slavery thing if we allow men control
over our bodies, and I agree with that, but I see that it works both
ways. For instance, I'm married and I know my husband wants children.
If I get pregnant, my choices are to not tell him and abort, tell him
and abort, carry to term. If we both want children, there's no prob.
with carrying to term, but if I abort and don't tell him, well I guess,
there's no prob if I don't get caught, but I think it's pretty shitty
thing to do. If I do get caught, I know he would be devestated and
feel he would have every right to a divorce/annulment because I
willfully broke a promise to him. So, in essence, he's held
accountable or is force to live with my decisions, even though they do
effect him to, so that's where I see the slavery parallel. Wish I had
some real answers.
|
822.43 | Technical information. Sperm is NOT required. | SMURF::BINDER | Ut aperies opera | Fri Aug 21 1992 12:30 | 15 |
| Re: .36
Since you don't understand what I said in .35, allow me to elaborate.
Parthenogenesis is a mechanism whereby an unfertilized gamete (ovum)
can be stimulated so that it will develop and grow into a female baby
with only half the usual number of chromosomes. No sperm is required.
And an adult created in this way is perfectly capable of reproducing.
The parthenogenetic process is the natural means of reproduction for
certain species of lizards, of which there are NO male specimens in
existence. It has been induced in the laboratory in frogs and other
amphibians, and there is nothing that prevents its application to the
supposedly "higher" forms of life except human morality.
-dick
|
822.44 | well, someone has to pay...and I don't wanna! | FORTSC::WILDE | why am I not yet a dragon? | Fri Aug 21 1992 14:32 | 35 |
| should the man be held responsible for the child born to a woman who gets
pregnant even if he doesn't want her to?
Well, let me see....if he doesn't WANT to be a daddy, he gets off scott-free?
Hmmmmmm...so, if she cannot support the child for any reason, what do we
do - let the child starve??? or if she gets put out onto the street because
she cannot afford a home, do we let the child freeze to death????
No, we don't...because the child isn't at fault in this - and if the woman
cannot support the child, then someone has to - so, it's either ALL OF US
TAXPAYERS or it is the man responsible for the child's existence. Now, what
do you think is fairer? That you support the children of some stranger
whom you will never meet because he is busy fathering children he didn't
really WANT - or that he be dragged into court, if need be, and compelled to
support his own offspring? Frankly, you may all be very nice people, but
I don't choose to support the children you create while you are "just having
fun"...so, I think you all should be held responsible for your own offspring.
It doesn't matter one whit whether the woman "promised" to avoid pregnancy
and then ended up pregnant...it doesn't matter one whit whether the woman
signed a paper saying she won't ask the man for support. In the event that
the woman cannot afford to support the child, then someone has to - and that
"someone" should be the other parent....I am already supporting more than
enough children of men and women who cannot suport them...If either parent
CAN support a child, then I say, make them pay...and if it takes both
parents to keep the child healthy, warm, safe, and educated, then BOTH
parents have to pay. Unfortunately, if jail is the only incentive that
will bring this about, then jail must remain an option.
Your premise that the man should somehow be absolved of this responsibilty
only works if you think of the child as simply a "punishment"...and it falls
apart when you think of the child as a human being with needs that must be met.
Again, this isn't an issue of whether the woman was right or wrong...she may
have been terribly devious in her transaction with the man....she may not
have been. It isn't even relevent...
|
822.45 | | IAMOK::KELLY | | Fri Aug 21 1992 14:43 | 17 |
| Well, I guess we must agree to disagree. I do think the element
of trust is relevent, period. It can also be said that a woman
who knows she cannot support a child by herself should make sure
she never gets pregnant. I know this is more than a man v woman
issue, but I am personally aware of more situations where a child
was brought about or denied on a matter of trust violations and I
feel that the saying "your gonna play,, your gonna pay" applies
specifically to the partner who violated the trust. Also, even
though not recognized by the courts, a signed agreement between
parties absolving one of the other from responsiblity- well, I
think it's rotten to agree to it at the time, then 2,3 whatever
years down the road, when things are a little rough, chase down
the person (male or female) for support. If I don't want a
child, I'll make sure it doesn't happen. If I have an accidenal
pregnancy, it could very well be that I'd want the child, but not
the father. Bottom line for me is that whatever choice *I* make,
*I* will be responsible for the consequences...
|
822.46 | Equal is as equal does | CSC32::HADDOCK | Don't Tell My Achy-Breaky Back | Fri Aug 21 1992 15:08 | 18 |
| re .44
>It doesn't matter one whit whether the woman "promised" to avoid pregnancy
>and then ended up pregnant...it doesn't matter one whit whether the woman
>signed a paper saying she won't ask the man for support. In the event that
>the woman cannot afford to support the child, then someone has to - and that
>"someone" should be the other parent....I am already supporting more than
>enough children of men and women who cannot suport them...If either parent
>CAN support a child, then I say, make them pay...and if it takes both
>parents to keep the child healthy, warm, safe, and educated, then BOTH
>parents have to pay. Unfortunately, if jail is the only incentive that
>will bring this about, then jail must remain an option.
Then would you support the option of jail as an "incentive" to
"welfare mothers" to get off the dole and get to work helping
support the children they brought into the world.
fred();
|
822.47 | | PCCAD::DINGELDEIN | PHOENIX | Fri Aug 21 1992 16:06 | 18 |
| RE: .45
I couldn't agree more with how you've clarified the "real" issue.
Thanks.
RE. 44
Just because the results of conception are gestated for 9 months within
a female body does't make it right to impose a lifelong responsibility
on someone. Men don't want to "enslave" womans bodies or "control"
them. If a woman wants the child and the man doesn't then if she opts
to have the child then she's gotta be willing to accept the full
responsibility for her decision.
About who pays.
If woman go to AFDC they get benefits. Welfare dollars subsidize what
the state cannot make up through support collectios. If there was a
"serious deterent" for woman to consider then maybe our taxes wouldn't
be so high to begin with. The guy's already got the incentive to avoid
having unwanted children. The man has to pay back 100% of all funds
collected by the custodial mom. Why? Shouldn't he only have to pay
half?
|
822.48 | | CSC32::M_EVANS | hate is not a family value | Fri Aug 21 1992 16:14 | 18 |
| Well I guess reading some of these replies that there are an awfullot
of men in this world that should never, ever, sleep with another woman.
Since men are currently an integral part of how babies get made, and
yet it seems that a good number of you feel it is unfair that biology
is unfair, why don't you all consider going "solo" or same sex, and
leave women totally out of your gameplan, with the exception of
professional, non-sexual interactions.
It may not be fair that women make a final decision, but that is and
should be the right of someone who stands a 13 per 10000 chance of
dying with complications related to pregnancy and/or childbirth. I
seriously doubt that there is a comparable statistic for men making
babies.
I really would like to know why you all hate children so much,
particularly those that you may have made.
Meg
|
822.49 | | PCCAD::DINGELDEIN | PHOENIX | Fri Aug 21 1992 16:39 | 4 |
| Comeon Meg, Thats not it. I love woman and kids. This whole attitude
about men "fathering" children infers that if we want sex then we have
to take full responsibility for all the consequences. Don't woman
"mother" kids too.
|
822.50 | | DELNI::STHILAIRE | that way down highway 61 | Fri Aug 21 1992 16:45 | 5 |
| re .49, of course, if you want sex you have to take full responsibility
for all the consquences. Both men and women do.
Lorna
|
822.51 | imaginary scenarios don't change facts | FORTSC::WILDE | why am I not yet a dragon? | Fri Aug 21 1992 16:54 | 33 |
| >> Comeon Meg, Thats not it. I love woman and kids. This whole attitude
>> about men "fathering" children infers that if we want sex then we have
>> to take full responsibility for all the consequences. Don't woman
>> "mother" kids too.
no, you come on - you seem firmly convinced that all the woman taking
support have some secret stash of money somewhere that they are hiding and
then forcing the poor mistreated man to pay support....where do you get
this information? The fed. govt. has statistics that women spend an average
of 5 years on AFDC...that is only 5 years...just about long enough to get
the child grown up enough to go to school. The custodial parent spends
the time and lives the restricted life that being a parent entails. The
custodial parent may not have the skills to get a job that will pay enough
to pay child care costs and rent and food, etc....in fact, many don't. Many
woman don't find jobs when they have small chidren because nobody wants
to hire someone who will be absent from work so much.
WHO ELSE SHOULD SUPPORT THE CHILD IF THE MOTHER CANNOT????
If the mother is a non-custodial parent, then she should pay as much child
support as the non-custodial male parent would have to pay - percentage
of income calculations - it won't be the same amount as a male would pay
because he can earn more money (statistically speaking), but it should
be the same percentage. The non-paying non-custodial parent should
be subject to the same penalties for non-payment.
When a child is born the parents support the child. Period. No
excuses. The child NEEDS that support whether you wanted to be a daddy
or not. If you don't want to be a daddy and the woman is raising the
child alone, and she can afford to let you get off without paying, fine.
But, if she gets to the point of needing the money to support the child,
then you have to pay....the child's needs don't go away because you don't
want to be a daddy.
|
822.52 | | CSC32::M_EVANS | hate is not a family value | Fri Aug 21 1992 17:07 | 13 |
| Women mother children and take it from oone who knows, working single
parents work their tails off, at home and at whatever job, schooling
etc they can get. Most women take far more responsibility for their
children than even men who live in the same household.
I just would like for men who father children to take their share of
reponsibility too, and if they aren't willing to take the risk of
spreading their genes around, do something to avoid it, instead of
whining about how women manage to get themselves pregnant.
Meg
|
822.53 | contracts sign away a child's birthright | FORTSC::WILDE | why am I not yet a dragon? | Fri Aug 21 1992 17:08 | 7 |
| re: contract between the parents
a case could be made that the parent who signs to release the other parent
from financial obligation is, in fact, signing away the child's birthright...
and that the child's needs override any such agreement.
|
822.54 | | VMSSG::NICHOLS | Conferences are like apple barrels... | Fri Aug 21 1992 17:14 | 4 |
| <a case could be made ...>
as indeed it was (made) in 822.18
and (remade) in 822.23
|
822.55 | some things need to be asked | CSC32::HADDOCK | Don't Tell My Achy-Breaky Back | Fri Aug 21 1992 17:34 | 22 |
| re .51
>WHO ELSE SHOULD SUPPORT THE CHILD IF THE MOTHER CANNOT????
>
>If the mother is a non-custodial parent, then she should pay as much child
>support as the non-custodial male parent would have to pay - percentage
>of income calculations - it won't be the same amount as a male would pay
>because he can earn more money (statistically speaking), but it should
>be the same percentage. The non-paying non-custodial parent should
>be subject to the same penalties for non-payment.
However, it's next to impossible for the father to get custody of
the child against the mother's wishes. Especially in cases where
the parents are not married. If the father is more able to care for
and provide for the child, if he wants custody, should he not be
afforded that opportunity?
Should the CP be allowed to just sit and collect AFDC because it
is inconvienent to work or because remaining on AFDC is more
profitible?
fred();
|
822.56 | | PCCAD::DINGELDEIN | PHOENIX | Fri Aug 21 1992 17:35 | 12 |
| IMHO children have the right and "need" of two loving and committed
parents. This is the only birthright. With love and caring comes the
support necessary to insure the childs healthy development. Modern day
phsychologists such as Alice Miller, John Bradshaw and others talk about
the subliminal communications during pregnancy and early in development
relating to the receptivity of the parents to the child. Lack of
unconditional love for the child has very negative impact on the childs
self esteem and emotional development. In this context forcing a child
onto someone is very detrimental to the child. I'm not just thinking of
men but everyone. There are a lot of "shoulds" in this world but what
I'm interested in is how to create DETERENT to creating this mess in
the first place.
|
822.57 | | DELNI::STHILAIRE | that way down highway 61 | Fri Aug 21 1992 17:46 | 4 |
| re .56, you mean like birth control?
Lorna
|
822.58 | birth control? heaven forbid | VMSSG::NICHOLS | Conferences are like apple barrels... | Fri Aug 21 1992 17:48 | 1 |
|
|
822.59 | | PCCAD::DINGELDEIN | PHOENIX | Fri Aug 21 1992 17:49 | 1 |
| Birth control is not a deterent to deception or breach of trust.
|
822.60 | | DELNI::STHILAIRE | that way down highway 61 | Fri Aug 21 1992 17:55 | 6 |
| re .59, there is no way to eliminate the risk of deception or breach of
trust when dealing with other human beings. It's best to just accept
that as part of life. Only my opinion, of course.
Lorna
|
822.61 | | PCCAD::DINGELDEIN | PHOENIX | Fri Aug 21 1992 18:00 | 2 |
| RE: .60
You can't eliminate it but can you minimize it?
|
822.62 | so, be careful in your choice of partner | FORTSC::WILDE | why am I not yet a dragon? | Fri Aug 21 1992 18:02 | 13 |
| >>>> Birth control is not a deterent to deception or breach of trust.
so?.....birth control IS a deterrent to the unwanted pregnancy. Are you
proposing that society pay for the child because the man chose an unworthy
sexual partner????? I didn't TELL HIM TO HAVE SEX WITH HER...I should not
have to pay for his bad choices...if HE doesn't pay, and she can't pay,
then who does????
The deterrent to deception is to be VERRRRY careful about choosing a
sexual partner. To refuse to pay for the child because you didn't INTEND
to get her pregnant punishes the child....and punishes the tax payers
who have to pay for the child's support. This isn't OUR problem...it
is yours.
|
822.63 | | SMURF::BINDER | Ut aperies opera | Fri Aug 21 1992 18:11 | 9 |
| Allow me to point out the obvious fact that there is a very reliable
deterrent to deception or breach of trust on the woman's part. If the
MAN refuses to have sex without a condom, he is pretty sure he's not
going to father a child. Not 100% sure, because condoms do fail, but
if his refusal eliminates the willingness of a deceptive woman to have
sex with him in the first place, then he's going to be far safer than
merely the reliability percentage of condoms.
-dick
|
822.64 | | PCCAD::DINGELDEIN | PHOENIX | Fri Aug 21 1992 18:12 | 6 |
| re: .62
The premise is the woman willingly agreed to take full responsibility
and then "changed her mind". Your argument about "who pays" is that we
all pay in many ways other than monitary. If there was a valid deterent
then there would be so few cases such as proposed that the financial
impact on the welfare system would be far less.
|
822.65 | | VMSSG::NICHOLS | Conferences are like apple barrels... | Fri Aug 21 1992 18:22 | 12 |
| <proposing that society pay for the child>
yup (as the supporter of last resort)
As a practical matter that's what happens to unwanted kids, and kids who
are born into hostile environments. American society does a pretty
lousy job of it though.
All of which is why abortion doesn't turn out to be such a terrible
option(considering the alternatives) in my opinion. Sort of like a
nuclear bomb. Horrible, horrible, horrible, horrible but the
alternative was viewed to be an invasion of Japan (with one million
dead?) and Russian troops moving much further south.
|
822.66 | | PASTIS::MONAHAN | humanity is a trojan horse | Sun Aug 23 1992 04:44 | 27 |
| re: society paying for the child.
The attitudes make an interesting contrast to here in France.
France has a declining population, and the demographic trends give
reasonable concern that at some time in the future there will not be
enough working population to support those who have retired.
Possible solutions could include compulsory euthanasia at a certain
age, or restricting access to birth controls or abortions, but the
French chose instead to provide financial incentives to have children.
The next generation of children is regarded as an essential state
asset, and the state is prepared to ensure that they are adequately fed
and educated.
Of course this means higher taxes for non-custodial parents and
others who choose not to have children, but this is a small price to
pay to avoid a breakdown of society when you are too old to cope.
Even in the U.S. I believe you have to pay taxes to support schools
whether or not you have children attending, so this is just society
taking it one stage further by taking responsibility for a child's food
and shelter as well as his education.
None of this guarantees the child love and affection of course, but
it does mean that there is a strong tax incentive not to become a
non-custodial parent, and I have known some families stay together for
that reason.
|
822.67 | | TENAYA::RAH | | Mon Aug 24 1992 02:06 | 3 |
|
Are they really discussing compulsary euthanasia in France??
|
822.68 | | PASTIS::MONAHAN | humanity is a trojan horse | Mon Aug 24 1992 02:47 | 6 |
| Of course they are not. Nor are they discussing mass-production of
test tube babies in government laboratories. They have a demographic
problem to solve, and I was just pointing out that most of the other
possible solutions are more objectionable than treating children as a
national asset for which the state is prepared to make a substantial
financial contribution.
|
822.69 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | the dangerous type | Mon Aug 24 1992 08:22 | 46 |
| re: .44
I noticed a curious lack of judgement of the behavior of a woman who is
unable to support a child, but who, having become pregnant, insists
on having it anyway. Inasmuch as you demand that the man behave responsibly
under any and all circumstances, your lack of comment about what is perhaps
as irresponsible a decision as one can make is decidedly curious. One might
conclude that you believe that women need not exercise any restraint or
common sense regarding reproduction, because it is a "right" to have
children, and if she should happen to become pregnant then ability to provide
for the child (emotionally, financially, logistically) should not even enter
into the equation because she (at least) has the man on the hook for the
financial aspect.
Your unwillingness to have society pay for children that are unwanted by
one partner or another is laudable, but I notice you made no mention about
women who insist upon having children regardless of the feelings of their
partner. It's perfectly ok for a woman to make the choice she wants, and
she doesn't have to consider whether her partner wants the child or not because
she has society ready to toss the father's ass in jail at her behest if he
is unwilling to pay for the child SHE wants.
Ah, you say, but if a man doesn't want to pay for unwanted children, he
should keep it in his knickers as even the most effective forms of birth
control sometimes fail (and then it's tough noogies for him). You don't
make the parallel. You don't say to women, "if you don't want to have to deal
with a pregnancy on your own, make sure you know how your partner feels
_before_ you sleep with him." Nope, because that would imply a level of
responsibility for women that you are simply unwilling to allow.
The ability for a woman to haul a man into court and get the judge to order
the man to support offspring is a direct descendant of patriarchical male
attitudes about women. Women need to be taken care of (because they are
incapable of taking care of themselves.) Women must be treated differently
as they are apt to break under typical male handling. Etc. This legacy which
you embrace is a result of females being considered inferior beings. I don't
believe for a second that if men had children that they would be able to
haul a woman into court and get her to pay. And even if they could, it would
be considered to be shameful and humiliating. Men would just NOT have children
they weren't prepared for. End of story.
I think that the attitude that a woman can have kids anytime she wants because
there will always be a man on the hook to pay for it all prevents equality
just as surely as the glass ceiling...
The Doctah
|
822.70 | | CSC32::M_EVANS | hate is not a family value | Mon Aug 24 1992 10:26 | 26 |
| Doctah,
this is why I keep harping on men using birth control as well as women.
I really think that men are capable of preventing having decisions made
for them, by using a condom, vasectomy and helping a partner with her
methods of BC as well. I like to believe that men are not such slaves
to their hormones, that they can't take 20 seconds to use a condom
correctly.
Also encouraging partners to get training, education, etc, to increase
one's ability to make it in this economy may help end the idea that
women are in need of care.
However, children whether concieved on purpose or not need the support
of two parents. If you feel that supporting a child financially and
emotionally is not in your cards, take steps to prevent it. If you
haven't and a partner winds up with a bun in the oven, then you own
part of the responsibility for that child. I really like to think that
pride of not having one's offspring on the public system would be
enough to have both parents supporting a child, but from the sounds of
people in here, that is a far better solution than taking personal
responsibility. (Just like my ex) I still think that men who feel
that women are inherently deceptive creatures should never go to bed
with one.
Meg
|
822.71 | | GORE::CONLON | | Mon Aug 24 1992 10:47 | 17 |
| RE: .69 The Doctah
> I don't believe for a second that if men had children that they would
> be able to haul a woman into court and get her to pay. And even if they
> could, it would be considered to be shameful and humiliating. Men would
> just NOT have children they weren't prepared for. End of story.
This is pretty funny. I wonder if you think that men never over-extend
themselves financially or mismanage their resources (by buying new
cars, boats, or high-tech toys they can't really afford.) I wonder
if you think men never make poor economic/financial decisions.
Is it that men have more affection for cars, boats, and high-tech toys
than they would have for an impending new family member (so the same
guy who buys the car/boat/high-tech_toy and says "I'll manage it
somehow" would find it easier to resist bringing a new child into
the world)?
|
822.72 | | PCCAD::DINGELDEIN | PHOENIX | Mon Aug 24 1992 11:21 | 14 |
| re: .71
I fail to understand how you can compare a material object with a
living human being. The level of committment and responsibility towards
children is unrivaled in my life experience.
Thanks "DOCTAH" for seeing the true issue.
Meg, most of your response in this note continue to stress the man must
be the one to "ultimately avoid" pregnancy and live with the decision
of the woman. If both partners are taking the necessary precautions
then this must imply a conciuos attempt to not want kids at that time.
Why should one person be allowed to impose their desires on someone
else? Your arguments continue to state once the "bun" is in my oven
then it's my bun. Children are not possesions. What gives a woman the
right to make this decision?
|
822.73 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | the dangerous type | Mon Aug 24 1992 11:29 | 27 |
| > I really think that men are capable of preventing having decisions made
> for them,
The only reason that men can "have decisions made for them" is because
we as a society have granted women this power. It is just as easy to take
this power away as it was to grant it. Doing this would then shift the
burden of the reponsibility for the uterus to the person who owns it.
> Also encouraging partners to get training, education, etc, to increase
> one's ability to make it in this economy may help end the idea that
> women are in need of care.
Absolutely. Parents need to take responsibility for educating their female
children as well as their male children to preclude their daughters being
incapable of supporting themselves without a partner (male or female).
> However, children whether concieved on purpose or not need the support
> of two parents.
I agree. Why a woman would choose to have a child that is not going to have
the support of a father is beyond me.
I don't think the answer is to force a recalcitrant father to support his
unwanted offspring. The kid will rarely get the sort of support needed in
that scenario. Children should be _wanted_ by both parents. I truly believe
that if unwanted children were not brought into this world, there'd be less
child abuse, less poverty, and a better world.
|
822.74 | | GORE::CONLON | | Mon Aug 24 1992 11:47 | 33 |
| RE: .72
> I fail to understand how you can compare a material object with a
> living human being. The level of committment and responsibility towards
> children is unrivaled in my life experience.
Do you think that men manage their finances PERFECTLY once they become
fathers (so that no child is ever adversely affected by a man's bad
personal planning or financial management?)
The Doctah's claim (that if men became pregnant, they would NOT bring
children they couldn't afford into the world) is absurd. Men *do*
make mistakes in judgment in financial matters (and some of these
mistakes *do* affect the children they support.)
> If both partners are taking the necessary precautions then this must
> imply a conciuos attempt to not want kids at that time.
In cases where the man gets "caught," he wasn't taking precautions.
He left it to the woman. If the man took his own precautions (while
the woman was also taking precautions,) then they'd both face a LOT
less risk of accidental pregnancy. Most men don't want to take this
responsibility, though.
It appears that most men want the freedom to have as much sex (with
as many different women) as they care to have - WITHOUT A SINGLE OUNCE
OF RESPONSIBILITY FOR BIRTH CONTROL - and the freedom to walk away if
they get women pregnant.
I could see the complaint if women were putting holes in a man's
condoms or something, but it's rarely the situation. It appears
that many/most men simply don't want ANY responsibility when it
comes to sex (beyond their own enjoyment.)
|
822.75 | | DELNI::STHILAIRE | that way down highway 61 | Mon Aug 24 1992 12:26 | 18 |
| re .74, unfortunately, it seems that way to me, too. Re men wanting
enjoyment without responsibility regarding sex.
I think that if a child is accidentally conceived, when birth control
is being used, that both parents share an equal responsibility in
financially supporting that child.
If the man doesn't want the child, and the woman discovers, that once
finding herself pregnant, she can't bring herself to have an abortion
(perhaps a pro-choice woman suddenly sees abortion as killing her own
baby, when the fetus in question is hers?), I think it would take a
very cold hearted man to suggest that a woman have an abortion, anyway,
even though it may break her heart, and ruin her life. It really
saddens me to think that the average man could turn out to be so cold
hearted.
Lorna
|
822.76 | | PCCAD::DINGELDEIN | PHOENIX | Mon Aug 24 1992 12:35 | 2 |
| Lorna,
Why is the fetus "hers"?. Isn't the fetus "Theirs"?
|
822.77 | | UTROP1::SIMPSON_D | $SH QUO: You have 0 miracles left | Mon Aug 24 1992 12:41 | 6 |
| I think it's fairly obvious that the fetus is hers because it is in her
body. If and when technology advances to the point that we can bring a
fetus to term in an artificial womb then the whole question of rights
will remain lopsided, and if that's unfair then tough. If, through
fault on one or both sides, the women becomes pregnant then right now
the decisions are hers and there is no realistic way around that.
|
822.78 | | PCCAD::DINGELDEIN | PHOENIX | Mon Aug 24 1992 12:52 | 7 |
| re: .77
I disagree. That fetus is the result of an interaction between two
consenting individuals. Both contribute to the creation. Just because
the results of conception gestate for nine months in the female womb
doesn't make the fetus "female property". Once that fetus is brought to
term both the mother and father are held responsible for it. Where are
the fathers rights in your context?
|
822.79 | | CSC32::HADDOCK | Don't Tell My Achy-Breaky Back | Mon Aug 24 1992 12:53 | 35 |
| reply .75
> re .74, unfortunately, it seems that way to me, too. Re men wanting
> enjoyment without responsibility regarding sex.
Unfortunateley I see a lot of women with this same attitude.
Especially teenagers with the attituce of "oh well, if I
get pregnant I'll get an abortion or get AFDC or get child
support".
> I think that if a child is accidentally conceived, when birth control
> is being used, that both parents share an equal responsibility in
> financially supporting that child.
And the mother goes on AFDC while the father goes to the poor house.
Is this "equal". While the only "fatherly" connection that the
father is allowedd with the child is the monthly "child support" check.
> If the man doesn't want the child, and the woman discovers, that once
> finding herself pregnant, she can't bring herself to have an abortion
> (perhaps a pro-choice woman suddenly sees abortion as killing her own
> baby, when the fetus in question is hers?), I think it would take a
> very cold hearted man to suggest that a woman have an abortion, anyway,
> even though it may break her heart, and ruin her life. It really
> saddens me to think that the average man could turn out to be so cold
> hearted.
Is it not just as cold hearted that if she wants the abortion and he
doesn't that there isn't one &^%$ thing *he* can do but stand and
watch his child be butchered.
I think your line of argument is utterly hypocritical.
fred();
|
822.80 | | GORE::CONLON | | Mon Aug 24 1992 12:55 | 10 |
| RE: .76
> Lorna,
> Why is the fetus "hers"?. Isn't the fetus "Theirs"?
In the context of her reply, IMO, she was distinguishing between a
fetus in someone else's body and a fetus in her body (and the possible
difference in her feelings about the situation when she's personally
involved.) She wasn't talking about "her" vs. "their" or "his"
fetus.
|
822.81 | | UTROP1::SIMPSON_D | $SH QUO: You have 0 miracles left | Mon Aug 24 1992 12:58 | 9 |
| re .78
> the results of conception gestate for nine months in the female womb
> doesn't make the fetus "female property". Once that fetus is brought to
Oh, yes it does. The fetus is in the woman's body and she decides
whether she wants to carry the parasite to term or not. This may be
lopsided, as I said, but it is reality until and if we get to the point
where we can sustain the fetus outside her womb.
|
822.82 | | FMNIST::olson | Doug Olson, ISVG West, Mtn View CA | Mon Aug 24 1992 12:59 | 10 |
| Mark, you argue an interesting case, but your rhetoric goes overboard
along the way. Do you really imagine that the 'responsibility for the
uterus' currently rests anywhere other than with 'the one who owns it'?
The laws are as draconian wrt fathers and child support, need I remind
you, only because the society has learned over many generations that a
father will often cut and run, leaving all that responsibility where?
Why, outside the bounds of your rhetoric, obviously.
DougO
|
822.83 | | HDLITE::ZARLENGA | do you have any grey poop on? | Mon Aug 24 1992 13:06 | 8 |
| .82>Do you really imagine that the 'responsibility for the
.82>uterus' currently rests anywhere other than with 'the one who owns it'?
A large portion of the financial responsibilty does.
Just because some dads split and are never found, that doesn't mean
they're not responsible. We both know they are. And when they're
found, so do the courts.
|
822.84 | | GORE::CONLON | | Mon Aug 24 1992 13:28 | 37 |
| RE: .79 Fred
>> re .74, unfortunately, it seems that way to me, too. Re men wanting
>> enjoyment without responsibility regarding sex.
> Unfortunateley I see a lot of women with this same attitude.
> Especially teenagers with the attituce of "oh well, if I
> get pregnant I'll get an abortion or get AFDC or get child
> support".
Try, "Oh well, it's only surgery on my body while I'm awake and can
feel excrutiating pain" or "Oh well, it's only the next 21 years of
my life (during which I'll most likely be stuck in poverty, even if
the guy or AFDC DOES provide some amount of child support.)"
> And the mother goes on AFDC while the father goes to the poor house.
And you think living on AFDC is *not* the poor house??? These women
are living on a lot less than 40 hours per week minimum wage would
pay (so they're definitely living on less than the Dad makes, if he's
working at all.)
> Is this "equal". While the only "fatherly" connection that the
> father is allowedd with the child is the monthly "child support" check.
Denying men ALL visitation rights is not the standard situation (unless
the guy had to be hunted down to pay child support, in which case he'd
already abandoned his "fatherly connection" by taking off.)
> Is it not just as cold hearted that if she wants the abortion and he
> doesn't that there isn't one &^%$ thing *he* can do but stand and
> watch his child be butchered.
If the mother doesn't wish to put her life/health at possible risk by
carrying a pregnancy to term, he can't demand that she do this. It's
unfortunate if he wanted the child, but he can't force her to take a
health risk (against her will) that he doesn't also face.
|
822.85 | equality is a two way street | CSC32::HADDOCK | Don't Tell My Achy-Breaky Back | Mon Aug 24 1992 13:43 | 5 |
| re. 84
I think that your reply is a perfect example your idea of "equality".
fred();
|
822.86 | | PCCAD::DINGELDEIN | PHOENIX | Mon Aug 24 1992 13:45 | 12 |
| re: .81
Just because the fetus resides in the female body doesn't make it "her
property". She has the power to allow the fetus to continue to develop
or not. This doesn't give her "property rights". She just controls the
destiny of the fetus.
This is the crux of the arguments that continue to cross back and forth
along who decides. No one is arguing that a woman has the ultimate
decision, just after the decision is made will society recognize the
release of obligation if the decision is against a mans desires. To
argue about who's responsible for pregnancy just distracts from the
core issue. How do you handle disent between the parties?
|
822.87 | Try again. | GORE::CONLON | | Mon Aug 24 1992 13:48 | 6 |
| RE: .85 Fred
> I think that your reply is a perfect example your idea of "equality".
Fred, cut the crap. Let's just stick to the discussion at hand, ok?
|
822.88 | Just what *is* your idea of *equality* | CSC32::HADDOCK | Don't Tell My Achy-Breaky Back | Mon Aug 24 1992 14:00 | 36 |
| re.87
> Fred, cut the crap. Let's just stick to the discussion at hand, ok?
It seems to me, Suzanne, that your side of the argument depends
a lot on "the descussion at hand".
It makes me question your credibility and sincerity when you talk
about "equality" in other nothes such as:
<<< QUARK::NOTES_DISK:[NOTES$LIBRARY]MENNOTES.NOTE;2 >>>
-< Topics Pertaining to Men >-
================================================================================
Note 819.4 Don't FATHER's Have ANY Rights? 4 of 75
MOUTNS::CONLON 18 lines 12-AUG-1992 15:24
-< Men are stuck with the bills 'cause men (as a group) have the $$ >-
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Fathers are expected to pay so much for child support because our
society still regards men as breadwinners and women as nurturers
(and because men still get paid most of the money in our society.)
If the people who make most of the money in our society (men) don't
use it to support their children, then the rest of the people who
make most of the money in our society (men) pay taxes to support
some other men's children. (Women pay these taxes, too, of course.)
As long as men are recognized as making most of the money in our
society, they will get stuck with big bills for child support.
When the pay scales are more equal, men will be relieved of much
of this burden (as well as the unfair burden of having to run so
much of society without women's capable help.)
Men need a rest from all this responsibility - when more men are
willing to share it with women, they'll get the rest they so richly
deserve.
|
822.89 | | GORE::CONLON | | Mon Aug 24 1992 14:16 | 13 |
| RE: .88 Fred
>> Fred, cut the crap. Let's just stick to the discussion at hand, ok?
> It seems to me, Suzanne, that your side of the argument depends
> a lot on "the descussion at hand".
Yes, I'd prefer that we discuss the issues rather than take personal shots
at each other. Ok?
If you have something to say about the discussion, get on with it.
If you're looking for a fight, forget it.
|
822.90 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | the dangerous type | Mon Aug 24 1992 14:28 | 9 |
| > Do you really imagine that the 'responsibility for the
>uterus' currently rests anywhere other than with 'the one who owns it'?
It has nothing to do with imagination, Doug. It's the law. If the uterus
becomes full, the responsibility for it is then shared by the man and
woman involved. True, only one party has any decision making ability,
but the simple fact is that currently both parties are held legally
responsible dependent on the results of the decision.
|
822.91 | shoes pinch on the other foot? | CSC32::M_EVANS | hate is not a family value | Mon Aug 24 1992 15:14 | 44 |
| Doctah,
Let's try this again. I am a woman and at this time I don't care to
have more children. I use my BC method responsibly to avoid an
unplanned pregnancy. It may not be 100% effective, but it is the
safest method for me, and Frank and I may decide we want another child at
some point in time. Becuase it is a barrier method it is inconvenient
at times and messy most of the time, but I am male centered as far as
my sexual orientation, and I will take the inconvenience and risk over
celibacy.
If I were a man and did not want children at this time, I have the
option of using birthcontrol to protect myself from an unplanned
pregnancy. it may not be 100% effective, but it is a safe method, if a
little inconvenient and non-spontaneous. It also may protect me from
several other potential problems, such as a certain incurable and fatal
STD that is wandering around in our population. I could further protect
myself and my partner by insisting on spermicidal jelly, creme or foam
used in conjunction with a condom. I have other choices if a am female
centered on my sexual orientation, such as celibacy as well.
If I refuse as a woman or a man to use birth-control of some form, then
I have abdicated my part in the decision making process, and leaving it
in the hands of the Universe, which sseems to have a perverse desire to
increase the human population. At that time, I own the fact that a
lack of responsibility in the decision making process, leaves me with
no choice but to participate in whatever the results of my lack of
responsibility become.
If I am male I can only vicariously share in the "joys" of pregnancy,
such as morning sickness, elevated BP, bouncing blood sugar,
migraines, backache, increased carpal tunneling in my wrists, emotional
swings, and several other little nasties that can cause liver and/or
kidny failure, and possibly result in death. I can support my partner
in labor, or not, and I don't have the scars left over from childbirth,
(physical and possibly emotional). I can only support my partner if
whe chooses an abortion, (routinely done without anesthetic as
anesthesia is far more dangerous than the procedure) and both of us
share the joys and pains of either decision.
I can also cut and run as men have been famous for doing for centuries.
This is why support laws have become draconion.
Meg
|
822.92 | | PCCAD::DINGELDEIN | PHOENIX | Mon Aug 24 1992 15:32 | 8 |
| RE: .91
There is one more factor to be considered. The childs need for two
"supportive and committed" parents. Anything less than total
committment is not "in the best interest of the child". Full term
pregnancy does incur major risk to the mother and child. Terminating
pregnancy in the first trimester may be potentially uncomfortable but
weighed agaist the monumental problems facing the mother, father and
child seems to be a momentary discomfort worth enduring. IMHO.
|
822.93 | | GORE::CONLON | | Mon Aug 24 1992 15:37 | 10 |
| RE: .92
> Terminating pregnancy in the first trimester may be potentially
> uncomfortable but weighed agaist the monumental problems facing
> the mother, father and child seems to be a momentary discomfort
> worth enduring. IMHO.
"Worth enduring" is a personal call that can only be made by the
individual who is facing the surgery (and the risks) you've described.
|
822.94 | | VMSMKT::KENAH | Keep on keepin' on... | Mon Aug 24 1992 15:39 | 5 |
| >There is one more factor to be considered. The childs need for two
>"supportive and committed" parents. Anything less than total
>committment is not "in the best interest of the child".
Says who?
|
822.95 | | PCCAD::DINGELDEIN | PHOENIX | Mon Aug 24 1992 15:41 | 4 |
| re: .93
So to the crux of all this dancing, If the woman decides against
termination should the ensuing responsibility be imposed upon the man?
|
822.96 | | GORE::CONLON | | Mon Aug 24 1992 15:45 | 10 |
| RE: .95
> So to the crux of all this dancing, If the woman decides against
> termination should the ensuing responsibility be imposed upon the man?
If the woman decides against termination (and against adoption,) then
the responsibility for the child's well-being rests on her shoulders.
She may (or may not) ask the father to share part of the financial
burden of this responsibility.
|
822.97 | | CSC32::M_EVANS | hate is not a family value | Mon Aug 24 1992 15:46 | 6 |
| Because the man is part of the genetic material involved. Because
presumably a man wants the very best for a piece of his future.
(How unrealistic of me)
Meg
|
822.98 | | PCCAD::DINGELDEIN | PHOENIX | Mon Aug 24 1992 15:51 | 8 |
| re: .94
An increasing body of evidence is forming around the dynamics of family
systems and "normal" emotional development. Anything less than
a mom-dad-child relationship is sub-par and IMHO be avoided at all
costs. Single parent households from divorced families still provide a
potentially committed father to the childs developmental needs IMHO.
Yes there are surrogate relationships to help fill the gaps but there
is only "damage control" and hope for the child.
|
822.99 | lawyer away, avoid the issue | FMNIST::olson | Doug Olson, ISVG West, Mtn View CA | Mon Aug 24 1992 15:59 | 8 |
| Mark, I'm disappointed. You neglected to address the 'whys' of the
present situation, though they were indicated in my note. But while
'responsibility' may be a legal concept, we both know that legalisms
represent only the shadow of the problem. Once we develop a society
wherein the men don't abandon their young, I suspect we'll see fairer
legislation.
DougO
|
822.100 | This may be a good guideline for *YOU*... | GORE::CONLON | | Mon Aug 24 1992 16:02 | 8 |
| RE: .98
> Anything less than a mom-dad-child relationship is sub-par and IMHO
> be avoided at all costs.
Again, this sounds like a good personal guideline, but others may
choose to follow a different guideline.
|
822.101 | what body of evidence??? | LUNER::MACKINNON | | Mon Aug 24 1992 16:08 | 9 |
| re -1
>anything less than a mom-dad-child relationship is sub-par
bull!!! as long as the child is loved and provided for it doesnt
matter just who it is that does the raising!!! If you truly
believe that the mom-dad-child relationship is sub-par then
don't have children. Because you never know just how life
is going to turn out.
|
822.102 | | PCCAD::DINGELDEIN | PHOENIX | Mon Aug 24 1992 16:14 | 8 |
| RE: 101
BEFORE YOU JUMP ON ME RE-READ THE TEXT OF MY REPLY. I said anything
less than a mom-dad-child relationship is "less than optimum. I then
said surrogate relationships can attempt tp approach the childs needs
but may or may not be effective. granted even nuclear families create
dysfunction to one degree or another but the most potential for
providing for the child resides in a nuclear family. IMHO.
|
822.103 | it's narrow minded | DELNI::STHILAIRE | that way down highway 61 | Mon Aug 24 1992 16:23 | 5 |
| re .101, fortunately the rest of the world has no obligation to live
their lives according to your opinion.
Lorna
|
822.104 | | DELNI::STHILAIRE | that way down highway 61 | Mon Aug 24 1992 16:24 | 4 |
| re .103, that was for Dan (not Michelle - obviously).
Lorna
|
822.105 | | VMSMKT::KENAH | Keep on keepin' on... | Mon Aug 24 1992 16:25 | 19 |
| re .98, WRT 94:
In .94, you stated your opinions as "truth." I appreciate your
acknowledging that they are your opinions. A few thoughts:
Two-parent "nuclear" families are a very recent phenomenon in society;
much more common in previous generations were multi-generational
extended families. In situations like these, the "parenting" was done
by many adults, not just the genetic parents, and the loss of a parent
(for whatever reason) was often less overwhelming.
On the other side of the coin, mom-dad-kids relationships aren't
necessarily ideal. There are lots of families out there that look
good on the outside, but are actually horrifc situations, for any
number of reasons: alcoholism, abuse, incest, workaholism, religious
regidity, and so on. In cases like these, removing one of the parents
improves, rather than diminishes, the quality of life in the family.
andrew
|
822.106 | | PCCAD::DINGELDEIN | PHOENIX | Mon Aug 24 1992 16:39 | 13 |
| re: 105
In my fervor to respond and defend I forgot to include the most
powerful of all resources for raising kids - The extended family.
Thanks for bringing that to the table.
re: FANGS
I find it intriguing that because I have opinions some wish to assume I
intend to impose them as "rules to live by" for all. My purpose in
these notes is to explore solutions, not impose them. Attack my ideas
all you want but please don't try to minimize the power of ideas by
attempting to diminish the source.
respectfully yours,
dan d
|
822.107 | oh really now - stretching the facts | FORTSC::WILDE | why am I not yet a dragon? | Mon Aug 24 1992 16:41 | 123 |
| > I noticed a curious lack of judgement of the behavior of a woman who is
>unable to support a child, but who, having become pregnant, insists
>on having it anyway. Inasmuch as you demand that the man behave responsibly
>under any and all circumstances, your lack of comment about what is perhaps
>as irresponsible a decision as one can make is decidedly curious. One might
>conclude that you believe that women need not exercise any restraint or
>common sense regarding reproduction, because it is a "right" to have
>children, and if she should happen to become pregnant then ability to provide
>for the child (emotionally, financially, logistically) should not even enter
>into the equation because she (at least) has the man on the hook for the
>financial aspect.
as has been mentioned, even the best forms of birth control can fail...and
if a pregnancy occurs, the woman must carry the child or have an abortion.
To many, the choice of abortion is simply not an option. At that point,
she has the child because she has not other choice. Lack of common-sense,
yes, perhaps, in that she has obviously chosen a partner who does not
have any intention of taking the responsiblity of the pregnancy should
one occur. Should she have chosen to have a child if she knew she wasn't
able to support it? Of course not. How do you know she planned to have
a child, first, and how do you know she wasn't able to support the child
at the time the choice was made - if it was? Children do not disappear
just because someone gets fired from a job or because the landlord suddenly
forces the family to move out or because someone gets laid-off and cannot
find another job. NOBODY knows if they can support a child for the full
infancy and adolesence of the child...and sometimes, even with the best
of intentions, they end up unable to.
FYI: If a woman with a dependent child goes to get help from the AFDC, she
is not given a choice to tap the biological father of the child or not...the
AFDC provides the lawyer and the action is required of the woman in order
for her to get aid. Period. No exceptions. You don't even know that the
woman in question WANTED to negate her contract - she may very well have
had no choice in the matter.
> Your unwillingness to have society pay for children that are unwanted by
>one partner or another is laudable, but I notice you made no mention about
>women who insist upon having children regardless of the feelings of their
>partner. It's perfectly ok for a woman to make the choice she wants, and
>she doesn't have to consider whether her partner wants the child or not because
>she has society ready to toss the father's ass in jail at her behest if he
>is unwilling to pay for the child SHE wants.
I said that if a woman has a job and can pay she SHOULD pay - what more do
you need from me? I also said that if she was non-custodial parent and
refused to pay, she should be subject to the same penalties as a male
non-custodial parent. If she is the custodial parent, then we gain nothing
by imprisoning her for not working...we then must provide shelter for
her children - and we still have no support for them. If the man is
the custodial parent, I also believe that jail is not an option. What is
unfair about that? I don't believe, however, that it is necessarily a
good idea whip the chidren away from the custodial parent if that parent
is in a financial bind for a short time...the children need stability.
If the custodial and non-custodial parents agree to the transfer, and the
children KNOW the non-custodial parent, it might be fine. However, I
would be very reluctant to pass the chidren into the care of a parent
who had to be dragged into court in order to get support from him/her...
how involved can that person be???
> Ah, you say, but if a man doesn't want to pay for unwanted children, he
>should keep it in his knickers as even the most effective forms of birth
>control sometimes fail (and then it's tough noogies for him). You don't
>make the parallel. You don't say to women, "if you don't want to have to deal
>with a pregnancy on your own, make sure you know how your partner feels
>_before_ you sleep with him." Nope, because that would imply a level of
>responsibility for women that you are simply unwilling to allow.
Doctah, the woman has the risk of pregnancy before her ALL the time. I know
there are women out there who abuse the system - and they are a mess we
all have to deal with - however, the vast majority of woman ARE as careful
as they can be...they don't choose to get pregnant by some dude who skips
out at the idea of fatherhood...however, they have the same lapses of
judgement as the men do - and when the accidental pregnancy arrives, she
has to either REALLY put up - pregnancy and parenthood - or she has to
get an abortion...you cannot seriously be suggesting that we have laws
compelling women to abort if the man wants the "problem" to go away?
Of course, she should have been better at choosing her partner!!!! BUT,
once the pregnancy occurrs, she doesn't have the CHOICE of signing off
her responsiblity to the pregnancy - either way, she has to deal with it.
> The ability for a woman to haul a man into court and get the judge to order
>the man to support offspring is a direct descendant of patriarchical male
>attitudes about women. Women need to be taken care of (because they are
>incapable of taking care of themselves.) Women must be treated differently
>as they are apt to break under typical male handling. Etc. This legacy which
>you embrace is a result of females being considered inferior beings. I don't
>believe for a second that if men had children that they would be able to
>haul a woman into court and get her to pay. And even if they could, it would
>be considered to be shameful and humiliating. Men would just NOT have children
>they weren't prepared for. End of story.
you are right. However, as said before, when woman must get aid, they don't
get a choice whether to go to court - the state does it for them. It is
also more often that a woman has to get aid because of inequities in salaries
and job opportunities for woman - especially for woman of small chidren -
and these inequities are the result of the patriarchial social views on
chid rearing....so, it still means little when a child is hungry and needs
a place to sleep and food to eat. I would like to see the system more equal.
However, I do not believe that equality equates to allowing a man to walk
away from his offspring just because he didn't want to be a parent. The
child needs the support and the child should get it. Every adult who is
responsible for a child must learn to take that responsibility seriously.
If they cannot, between the two of them, support the child adequately, then
we, the tax-payers must make up the rest of the cost - and I agree to that
willingly in order to protect the child...but, BOTH parents are responsible
for the child and both parents must live up to that responsibility...How
else are we ever going to teach them to really be responsible adults?
> I think that the attitude that a woman can have kids anytime she wants because
>there will always be a man on the hook to pay for it all prevents equality
>just as surely as the glass ceiling...
I think that any society that would let a child go hungry or without shelter
in order to punish the mother of that child for having the child even though
the father didn't want it is a barbaric society. I am not willing to
promote such an idea, nor do I feel that any other sane adult would do so...
the fact that our society is so close to this insanity right now is a
blight on our souls. I think that the solution to these kinds of problems
lies in the availability of cheap, effective birth control, education about
our bodies and reproductive systems, and education about the responsibilities
of parenthood. And, as said before, the woman doesn't have a choice about
taking the man to court - the choice is made when she goes for aid...if he
has a job, he will pay. That is the law - at least in my state.
|
822.108 | | PCCAD::DINGELDEIN | PHOENIX | Mon Aug 24 1992 17:04 | 8 |
| re: 107
I don't see anyone wanting to "punish the child". Blame and it's cruel
ways have no place in a humane system. The system should support the
mother and child without "going after the biological dad". The system
should honor the agreements between the parties.
Restating for the umpteenth time. How do you structure a system that
deters "entrappment" and allows a woman to have children against a mans
desires?
|
822.109 | | GORE::CONLON | | Mon Aug 24 1992 17:10 | 11 |
| RE: .108
> I don't see anyone wanting to "punish the child". Blame and it's cruel
> ways have no place in a humane system. The system should support the
> mother and child without "going after the biological dad". The system
> should honor the agreements between the parties.
If the system doesn't get the support money back from the dad (ever
again,) are you willing to pay more taxes to put this policy in place?
(I presume that the point of "going after" the Dads is to save all us
taxpayers from having to foot the entire bills for their kids.)
|
822.110 | | PCCAD::DINGELDEIN | PHOENIX | Mon Aug 24 1992 17:28 | 16 |
| re: .109
This is the dilema hardest to grapple IMHO. A deterent to entrappment
is tough to find without depriving the child and mother benefits. It
seems to be a catch 22.
Denying benefits will deter some but those that still have the kids
would be deprived. I don't like this because it punishes the innocent
child.
Giving the dad a chance at custody would deter woman from accessing
benefits for fear of losing the child. Again this could punish the innocent
kids by not getting them the aid they need.
I see out-of-wedlock births the primary source of the problem IMO.
Possibly registering the chid as such at the birthplace could allow
on-going counseling of the mother and father to avoid re-occurence.
Just a thought.
|
822.111 | | VMSMKT::KENAH | Keep on keepin' on... | Mon Aug 24 1992 17:37 | 22 |
| >===============================================================================
>Note 822.98 Where Do You Draw The Line? 98 of 110
>CCAD::DINGELDEIN "PHOENIX" 8 lines 24-AUG-1992 14:51
>-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
> re: .94
> An increasing body of evidence is forming around the dynamics of family
> systems and "normal" emotional development. Anything less than
> a mom-dad-child relationship is sub-par and IMHO be avoided at all
> costs.
>
>===============================================================================
>Note 822.106 Where Do You Draw The Line? 106 of 110
>PCCAD::DINGELDEIN "PHOENIX" 13 lines 24-AUG-1992 15:39
>-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
>
> re: 105
> In my fervor to respond and defend I forgot to include the most
> powerful of all resources for raising kids - The extended family.
These two statements are in direct contradiction to each other.
andrew
|
822.112 | y | PCCAD::DINGELDEIN | PHOENIX | Mon Aug 24 1992 17:50 | 15 |
| RE: 111
Not contradictory but serial in nature. Through parents come
relationship to the extended family. The extended family or other
surrogate source can substitute for but not replace the father. Do you
prefer an original or are you satisfied with a copy?
The point is the original parents and their extended family are the
best "potential" source of nurturing but not necessarily the only
source.
re: Andrew
My reference to John Bradshaw is to acknowledge the realities of
Dysfunctioal families and the need to in certain situations intervene
in existing nuclear families to protect the child. But if the abusing
parent/parents are able to be rehabilitated then they become the
"primary choice" for the kids IMHO.
|
822.113 | | GORE::CONLON | | Mon Aug 24 1992 17:56 | 21 |
| RE: .110
> This is the dilema hardest to grapple IMHO. A deterent to entrappment
> is tough to find without depriving the child and mother benefits. It
> seems to be a catch 22.
Meanwhile, nearly all of the men who are getting "caught" (not to mention
the ones who get away) are *not* taking responsibility for using birth
control to prevent this situation. If this is such a scary thing for
many/most men, why doesn't the threat of "entrapment" work to deter
these men from having sexual contact without taking this responsibility?
> Giving the dad a chance at custody would deter woman from accessing
> benefits for fear of losing the child. Again this could punish the
> innocent kids by not getting them the aid they need.
Again, where are your suggestions for ways to deter the dads from
having sex without taking responsibility for birth control? Is there
some reason why men should have zero birth control responsibility *and*
zero financial responsibilities for any seeds they hoped someone else
would keep them from planting?
|
822.114 | | VMSMKT::KENAH | Keep on keepin' on... | Mon Aug 24 1992 17:59 | 17 |
| >The extended family or other surrogate source can substitute for but
>not replace the father. Do you prefer an original or are you satisfied
>with a copy?
Depends. Just because someone provided half the genetic material
doesn't mean he (or she) has the capabilites to be a parent. If a
"copy" can raise the child better, I prefer the copy.
A digression: I listened to the Republicans talk about "family values"
then, a few days later, I saw a Bradshaw special talking about
dysfunctional families, and their prevalence in this country. I know
from personal experience that the kind of family that Bradshaw talks
about is much more common than the family the Republicans talk about.
I also know from personal experience that people (not just parents)
can recover and rehabilitate -- I also know that most of 'em don't.
|
822.115 | | PCCAD::DINGELDEIN | PHOENIX | Mon Aug 24 1992 18:06 | 8 |
| re: 113
I know the prospect of relinquishing 40% of my take-home pay is quite
sufficient of a deterent. Some guys just don't think with their brains
and will blindly trust "It's ok honey, I won't get pregnant". I've got
a 19 year old son jet-propelled by testosterone and I constantly remind
him of the potential consequences of un-protected sex. I pray he
doesn't give in to poor judgement.
|
822.116 | what a revelation this has been... | FORTSC::WILDE | why am I not yet a dragon? | Mon Aug 24 1992 20:06 | 67 |
| I find the idea of society taking over the responsibility for supporting
the infant in order for the biological father of the infant to walk away
with no expense because "she promised she wouldn't get pregnant" to be
repugnant. I, as a member of said society, do not choose to be
responsible for your or anyone else's lack of maturity and care to the
point where you or the original source of the "problem" walk away with
no responsibility....it is fair that the biological, non-custodial parent
of the child pay child support. It is also a GIVEN that the custodial
parent, whether mother or father, is also providing child
support - if not financially, then by the simple fact that the custodial
parent is the primary care-giver of the child - a job that would cost
a pretty penny if you hired someone to do it 24 hours a day, 7 days a week.
Consider how much child care 9 hours a day, 5 days a week costs - and figure
in the other hours, holidays, week-ends, etc.. It is also repugnant to suggest
that a pregnant woman is some kind of criminal because she doesn't
agree to terminate a pregnancy at the man's insistance. The whole premise
of personal autonomy is that I cannot make you do something with your body
that you do not choose to do - yet, I hear a clear undercurrent here that
you men feel that you should be able to tell a woman that, because you do
not choose to be a parent, she must abort...or, because you choose to be
a parent, she must carry a pregnancy to term. This amounts to ownership of
her reproductive system - and that is slavery.
I also find it quite interesting that the men in this string do not consider
for even a minute that the woman in the original case discussed herein might
NOT have been bent on deception, but rather, a victim of circumstance just
as the man is - that the pregnancy was not planned at all. You are all
quite willing to assume that she got pregnant ON PURPOSE, it seems ONLY
to coerce money from the man to support the child. Doesn't it strike you
that if a woman wanted to force a man to give her money, she might find
another method - one that did not force profound change in her lifestyle
for the next 18 or so years? Perhaps she could just get him into a
situation where she could blackmail him or something? The male attitude
expressed in this string of notes is appalling.....you totally negated
the possibility that the woman might have simply not been able to
accept an abortion within her moral context - nor did you grant her even
a shred of genuine need when she was forced to go to court to get child
support for her child. Yet, I hear you all protest loud and clear that a
man can lose his job or fall into hard times and not be able to pay child
support...doesn't this strike you as a bit lop-sided? Why is it that you
see sinister intent when the woman has to come to the man and ask for
support for his and her child??? Isn't it possible that she lost her job
or needs medical care - or even needs to spend time with the child due
to his/her special needs? And none of you addressed that fact that the AFDC
FORCES the court action - that the woman has no choice in the matter....or
doesn't that little fact fit into your scenario of the predatory woman looking
to get preggers so she can live in the lap of luxury on her $200.00/week...
if that much? When was the last time you tried to pay rent and feed and
clothe a child on $200.00/week. Guys, really, let me tell ya, if the woman
is so venal as to choose to get pregnant just to rip off a man for money...
she is going to marry a very rich man and she is going to stay married to
him long enough to walk away with a hell of a lot more money than you
working stiffs will earn in your lifetimes. I think it is safe to assume
that the woman who gets pregnant while assuming the position with you is
NOT planning her permanent vacation - she is a woman who has to make some
very heavy decisions and live by them. It won't be fun for her.
The simply fact is - if a woman just wants to get pregnant, she can go to
a clinic and get the sperm of rocket scientists or nobel prize winners or
at the very least, doctors. She can assure herself that her child packs
the genetic material of geniuses or great artists. Why in the hell do
you thing she would intentionally get pregnant by you??? Oh, I forgot,
so she could collect that $200.00/week....wow. What a concept.
Lord, I hope that the attitudes expressed in this string are not your
genuine feelings about women...if so, I don't give your relationships with
women any chance of long-term survival.
|
822.117 | | MILKWY::ZARLENGA | do you have any grey poop on? | Mon Aug 24 1992 23:08 | 8 |
| .116>I find the idea of society taking over the responsibility for supporting
.116>the infant in order for the biological father of the infant to walk away
.116>with no expense because "she promised she wouldn't get pregnant" to be
.116>repugnant.
And just what do you think of aborting the pregnancy in order for the
biologocial mother of the infant to walk away with no expense because
"she didn't want to be pregnant?"
|
822.118 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | the dangerous type | Tue Aug 25 1992 08:54 | 41 |
| >Should she have chosen to have a child if she knew she wasn't
>able to support it? Of course not. How do you know she planned to have
>a child, first, and how do you know she wasn't able to support the child
>at the time the choice was made - if it was?
Whether she planned to have the child or simply chose to continue an
unexpected pregnancy is immaterial. She ought to know what her capacity
is for supporting a child at the point she decides to have the baby and
keep it. And as far as having something happen that makes her no longer able
to support a child or children after having been able to before, well,
obviously there are no guarantees. And that's not what I am talking about at all.
>you cannot seriously be suggesting that we have laws
>compelling women to abort if the man wants the "problem" to go away?
Of course not. But a woman should realize that's legally speaking she's
on her own. She gets to decide how to deal with her pregnancy, but she also
bears the full responsibility for whatever outcome she chooses. Of course,
this does not prevent the man from stepping in and rendering assistance
if he should choose.
>It is
>also more often that a woman has to get aid because of inequities in salaries
>and job opportunities for woman - especially for woman of small chidren -
>and these inequities are the result of the patriarchial social views on
>chid rearing...
I agree 100%.
>However, I do not believe that equality equates to allowing a man to walk
>away from his offspring just because he didn't want to be a parent.
Wait a minute. I am not talking about offspring; I am talking about zygotes.
If a man and a woman have children and he decides he doesn't feel like
being a daddy anymore, that's tough beans for him. I am talking about
fertilized eggs, the kind that aren't people, remember from the abortion
note?
BTW, what do you think would happen to the birthrate of unwed mothers
if they knew they were on their own financially from the outset? Do you
think it would go up, go down, or stay the same?
|
822.119 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | the dangerous type | Tue Aug 25 1992 08:57 | 21 |
| >Anything less than
> a mom-dad-child relationship is sub-par
> In my fervor to respond and defend I forgot to include the most
> powerful of all resources for raising kids - The extended family.
>>> These two statements are in direct contradiction to each other.
No they aren't, Andrew. An extended family is better than a mom-dad-child
relationship. No contradiction at all.
Imagine the following heirarchy:
extended family
mom-dad-child
singe parent-child
ward of the state
|
822.120 | | CSC32::M_EVANS | hate is not a family value | Tue Aug 25 1992 09:34 | 8 |
| I am just curious,
Who do you all think wrote those"draconion" child support laws, voted
them through legilatures, and signed them into law? I dont know about
anyone elses state, but less than 10% of the legislaters in Colorado
are women.
Meg
|
822.121 | | BRADOR::HATASHITA | Hard wear engineer | Tue Aug 25 1992 09:51 | 6 |
| > Who do you all think wrote those"draconion" child support laws, voted
Spineless politicians who were more concerned with appeasing the
demands of the self-appointed politically correct and agenda motivated
vocal minority than they were concerned with justice.
|
822.122 | | PCCAD::DINGELDEIN | PHOENIX | Tue Aug 25 1992 10:28 | 6 |
| Each state has their own guidlines for child support. From the
information I've seen Mass is the "most draconian". There was a panel
convened back in the mid-eighties consisting of the BAR, Dept. of
Social Servises, The Judicial, Welfare etc. Not one representative of
Non-Custodial Parents. From the results of this "panel" it looks like a
"supertax" on NCP's to help finance state welfare programs.
|
822.123 | cant compare the two cases | EARRTH::MACKINNON | | Wed Aug 26 1992 09:56 | 9 |
|
re .117
How can you compare case one in which a born child exists to case
two in which a born child doesnt exist?
A born child needs finanical, physical and emotional support.
That responsibility rests with both of its parents.
|
822.124 | Mind your own business unless I ask you for help! | SMURF::BINDER | Ut aperies opera | Wed Aug 26 1992 12:03 | 18 |
| Re: responsibility rests with both parents
I demur. Suppose a woman is inseminated through a sperm bank. Is the
child entitled to the loving support of its biological father? I think
not.
Rather than pontificating the moral law for others (a thankless and
incidentally impossible task in any event), I think the determination
of responsibility rests with the individual people involved, and I (for
one) am certain that a woman alone is every bit as capable of arriving
at a correct determination for her situation as a man is for his. If
one parent's determination is that the child deserves both parents'
love and the other's is otherwise, then things can get sticky. Then,
not before, and only if government's interference is requested by one
of the parties, does society have any moral right whatever to stick its
collective nose in.
-dick
|
822.125 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | the dangerous type | Wed Aug 26 1992 12:51 | 25 |
| > How can you compare case one in which a born child exists to case
> two in which a born child doesnt exist?
You are inaccurately characterizing things. In both cases, the child or
nonchild (as you prefer) is in an identical state of existence at the time
of the decisions by both parents as to whether to have a child or not. If she
chooses to abort and he chooses to continue, he is overruled. If they both decide
one way or another, no problem. But if she decides to continue, he should be
afforded the same opportunity to opt not to have a child. And at that point, he
is not "walking away from a child" anymore or any less than a woman who chooses
to abort kills a child. We're talking about zygotes and fetuses here.
Should a man decide AFTER it is too late to abort that he doesn't want to be
a daddy, tough beans for him (assuming she didn't keep the pregnancy from him
or lie about her intentions). Same with kids. If a guy decides to leave his wife
(or vice versa) after kids exist, he has to continue to provide support.
> A born child needs finanical, physical and emotional support.
> That responsibility rests with both of its parents.
Absolutely. However, an unborn child's needs are completely met by the woman,
and it cannot be any other way. If a woman chooses to allow an unborn child to
become a born child and insists on keeping the child all the while knowing that
the father has no intention of providing the support the child requires, then
she's signing up to provide those things herself.
|
822.126 | | IAMOK::KELLY | | Wed Aug 26 1992 15:31 | 3 |
| RE: .125
AGREED!
|
822.127 | | DELNI::STHILAIRE | makes me stop & wonder why | Wed Aug 26 1992 16:57 | 13 |
| I agree with .116.
I think that men should just accept the fact that if an accidental
pregnancy occurs, that regardless of any verbal agreements made or not
made between the two participants, that the woman is going to go after
the man for child support, because most women cannot afford to raise a
child alone on their salaries. I think that any men who cannot accept
this should not have sex with women. After reading this string, I
can't see where it would be any great loss for most of us. I wouldn't
want any such selfish brutes touching a kid of mine anyway.
Lorna
|
822.128 | | PCCAD::DINGELDEIN | PHOENIX | Wed Aug 26 1992 17:46 | 11 |
| Lorna,
"A child of mine" suggests possession. Kids aren't property.
"Men shouldn't have sex with woman" - A woman has the right to say
no to sex just as much as a man. A woman can insist on the terms of sex
more than a man. "Men don't get woman pregnant", pregnancy is a result
of sex which happens to be a mutual decision. If the woman isn't ready
to care for kids she has all the choices in the world to avoid having
them.
dan d
|
822.129 | | DELNI::STHILAIRE | makes ya stop & wonder why | Wed Aug 26 1992 18:03 | 27 |
| re .128, yes, and so do *men*!!! So, what's your point? What's your
problem? You don't want kids, either get a vasectomy or practice
abstinance! Why this incessent complaining?
You say a child of mine suggests possession. You know as well as I do
that it's common for people to use the expression "my husband", "my
wife", "my girlfriend" "my daughter" - it's an expression - it doesn't
mean people think they *own* the other person like they own their
briefcase or stereo or car.
Besides, if the man involved in the sex act, didn't want the kid, then
it would be mine. If two people jointly own something, and one of them
says, "I don't want this anymore" then it suddenly belongs to only one
of them!!
This is all academic anyway. You're talking to a 42 yr. old woman who
has only gotten pregnant once in her life, fer goddsakes!!
My opinion is that everyone knows that sex can result in pregnancy,
everyone should know that birth control is not 100% effective, and
sometimes fails. If birth control fails and the woman gets pregnant
inspite of it, and can't bring herself to have an abortion or give the
kid up for adoption, then I think the man has a 50% responsibility to
support the child. The law agrees with me.
Lorna
|
822.130 | in addition | DELNI::STHILAIRE | makes ya stop & wonder why | Wed Aug 26 1992 18:09 | 26 |
| re .128, you totally refuse to address the fact that birth control is
not 100% effective. Guess what? My 18 yr. old daughter was conceived
while I was on the pill! Yes, amazing things have happened in this
world. Condoms break sometimes, too!
What do you think should happen to a woman and child in this scenario -
birth control method fails and woman becomes pregnant
woman would be heart broken to either have an abortion or give child up
for adoption
man refuses to help support child
woman does not make enough money to raise child alone
Should the child go to bed hungry at night, in a cold house, and wear
rags, and have no toys, just because the biological father, who was
very happy to get his rocks off the night the kid was conceived, does
not want a child???
If this was your kid, would you let it live in poverty, while you lived
high on the hog, with a good job in a high tech company? Could you
sleep at night knowing your own flesh and blood was suffering?
You're pretty damned heartless if you could, IMO.
Lorna
|
822.131 | his perfect answer | FORTSC::WILDE | why am I not yet a dragon? | Wed Aug 26 1992 19:26 | 18 |
|
> If this was your kid, would you let it live in poverty, while you lived
> high on the hog, with a good job in a high tech company? Could you
> sleep at night knowing your own flesh and blood was suffering?
no, of course not...he would expect the tax payers of this country to pay
instead of him because he didn't want to become a daddy. In his scenario,
he should walk free because he didn't WANT the child. Of course, he also
feels free to criticize a women who might opt for abortion rather than
face the prospect of trying to raise a child with no, or only very
reluctant, child support from the father - on her salary. You see,
she is wrong to have an abortion....and she is wrong for expecting him
to pay for the child...apparently, if the birth control fails, it is
ALL HER FAULT.
nice mature attitude, eh?
|
822.132 | Taking away the man's choice | MIMS::ARNETT_G | Creation<>Science:Creation=Hokum | Thu Aug 27 1992 09:03 | 21 |
| re: last few
Lorna,
I've pretty much been a read only in this conference, but this
argument mirrors one we have had on a local bbs.
If two people enter into consensual sex and take the appropriate
measures, pregnancy can sometimes occur. But if the woman decides to
carry the child to term and keep it against the man's wishes, I don't
really think he should be liable for the kid's upkeep. Both parties
went into the act with the expectation that no child would result, so
why should the guy be liable for something he does not want and took
appropriate action to prevent? For that matter, since the woman
committed the act with the same expectations and is, in effect, forcing
her decision on the man(assuming he didn't want the child), why should
she expect any aid or succor from him?
Now I admit, I don't think I would be able to completely sever
myself from any child of mine, but I do not expect to be forced into a
position just because the woman has reneged on her previous position.
George
f
|
822.133 | | DSSDEV::BENNISON | Vick Bennison 381-2156 ZKO2-2/O23 | Thu Aug 27 1992 09:14 | 6 |
| > position just because the woman has reneged on her previous position.
You never stated her "previous position". Are you saying that she
agreed ahead of time that if she got pregnant that she'd have an
abortion?
- Vick
|
822.134 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | the dangerous type | Thu Aug 27 1992 09:17 | 4 |
| >The law agrees with me.
So if men band together and get the law changed, you'll have no quarrel
with that?
|
822.135 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | the dangerous type | Thu Aug 27 1992 09:19 | 7 |
| > Are you saying that she
> agreed ahead of time that if she got pregnant that she'd have an
> abortion?
The claim is that she did not indicate she wanted a child as an outcome of
the coupling. Or that she indicated she did NOT want a child as a result of
the coupling.
|
822.136 | | DSSDEV::BENNISON | Vick Bennison 381-2156 ZKO2-2/O23 | Thu Aug 27 1992 09:31 | 6 |
| So how did she "renege"? If she promised she'd get an abortion then
I can see how that would be reneging. But if she gets pregnant when
she didn't want to get pregnant then I don't see how she is "reneging"
anymore than he is. Neither of them wanted her to get pregnant.
- Vick
|
822.137 | | DELNI::STHILAIRE | makes ya stop & wonder why | Thu Aug 27 1992 10:55 | 15 |
| re .134, no, if men "band together" and get the law changed, I'll
disagree with the law. In this case, however, I was just pointing out
that, so far, the law does agree with me. (Often, it seems, the law
doesn't agree with my views - it's nice when it does on occasion! It's
not a claim I can always make, so I thought I'd make it while I could!)
I think men should be aware that just because a woman didn't *want* a
baby, and just because she used birth control, that does not mean that
she would get an abortion if she did happen to get pregnant by
accident. Not wanting a child, that has not yet been conceived, and
killing one that has been conceived are two entirely different matters,
for some of us.
Lorna
|
822.138 | | AIMHI::RAUH | I survived the Cruel Spa | Thu Aug 27 1992 12:21 | 4 |
| And if the rolls were reversed Lorna, a woman wants to abort the child
and the man wants to keep? Its her body? He has no say again? A mutual
consent to an unmututal end? He has no chance of even getting custody
if the child was carried to term in our present society.
|
822.139 | | CSC32::M_EVANS | hate is not a family value | Thu Aug 27 1992 12:28 | 22 |
| If you never want the risk of a woman getting pregnant, don't sleep
with one.
If you accept the fact that women do on occaision get pregnant, then
use protection yourself as well as whatever she may be using. Don't
just expect her to be using some form of birth control. Don't expect
that should she be pregnant that protective hormones won't kick in and
that she will just automatically get an abortion. Expect to take
responsiblities for your actions and not dump them all on a child should
a child result. Oh yeah, I forgot. It isn't a real baby if you didn't
want it to occur. It couldn't have any genetic material from you and
really shouldn't expect you to love, care for, or support it.
I recommend that everyone who doesn't understand support issues, spend
a day in a child support court. What you may learn about the
men and women who don't pay child support and their excuses may
surprise you.
Selfish, inconsiderate, and boorish, are the least offensive terms I
can come up with for several would-be deadbeat parents in this file.
Meg
|
822.140 | | PCCAD::DINGELDEIN | PHOENIX | Thu Aug 27 1992 12:36 | 11 |
| IMO the problem is the imposition of a responsibility. The child, once
born, has all the right to being cared for. I'm not arguing this. I'm
not inhumane nor irresponsible.
The system must recognize the dual nature of having children. Presently
it's a serial resoning that states "the man lives with the decision of
the woman". What gives the woman the right to make that imposition
outside of :territorial rights of the womb". Presently there is no
accountability or consideration for the mans intent. Children have got
to be a mutual decision or injustice occurs. IMO!
|
822.141 | | PCCAD::DINGELDEIN | PHOENIX | Thu Aug 27 1992 12:53 | 11 |
| RE: .139
Your point of "its not a real baby" is not the attitude I'm expressing
nor any other man IMO. As I stated many notes back - If the woman is
not willing to deal with the realities of pregnancy she should abstain
from sex also. You keep dumping that argument in the mans arena as if
its a risk only he can manage to avoid.
About support hearings - If child support was a "reasonable amount" and
visitation was enforced for the man then a lot of the adversarial
attitudes in probate would be defused and true fairness could emerge.
|
822.142 | | DELNI::STHILAIRE | makes ya stop & wonder why | Thu Aug 27 1992 12:55 | 22 |
| re .140, blame the injustice on nature. Babies grow inside women not
men. I was the one who had morning sickness, and had to walk around
with a mound the size of a rocketship attached to my otherwise frail
and slender form - :-) - not my exhusband (who has a stocky, sturdy
form!). I was the one who had to have a painful and frightening
C-section, not my ex-husband. I think it would have been more fair if
he had had to be pregnant some of the time, and if he had had to have
his tummy cut open, too, *but* damn nature, I got stuck with the whole
bit. And, guess what, when a baby is born they bring it to the mother
and expect her to take care of it. If a man says he wants a woman to
go thru with a pregnancy just so he can have the baby, if she doesn't,
who is to say he won't change his mind, and she'll get stuck with it
anyway. That happened to one of my best friends!!! The baby goes to
UMass now and the biological father never sees her, and has not
contributed one cent towards her upbringing.
The bottom line is, that history has shown us, that responsibility
sometimes has to be forced on people, because otherwise they are not
responsible.
Lorna
|
822.143 | _this_ is where I draw the line | CSC32::HADDOCK | Don't Tell My Achy-Breaky Back | Thu Aug 27 1992 15:40 | 15 |
| re .142
>re .140, blame the injustice on nature. Babies grow inside women not
Would you also support "blame the injustice on nature" for issues
like "women in combat", "women as firefighters", "women as _name_
your_phisycal_intensive_ocupation".
This is where I start having problems with the credibility of
so-called "equal rights" groups. They want "all things equal" when
it's to their benefit, but then want to "blame it on nature" when
it's to their benefit.
fred();
|
822.144 | | DELNI::STHILAIRE | makes ya stop & wonder why | Thu Aug 27 1992 15:56 | 12 |
| re .143, I do not think that women, in general, are as well suited to
combat or firefighting as men, and, in general, I am not in favor of
women in those capacities. I believe in equal options for men and
women, to a great degree, but feel that, at a certain point, common
sense in regard to reality needs to be utilized. So, I guess you don't
have me on that one, huh, Fred. Sorry to dissapoint you.
I don't follow any party line. I think for myself and form my own
opinions. It doesn't always make me popular, but it certainly makes me
opinionated (like many other noters).
Lorna
|
822.145 | Lord, I wish that you men got preggers!!!!! | FORTSC::WILDE | why am I not yet a dragon? | Thu Aug 27 1992 16:11 | 23 |
| nature has not rigged women to be less capable of killing another human
being than a man....ergo, the argument of who is suitable for battle must
be settled on a case-by-case issue...it isn't valid to limit the job
of soldiering to only men, and asking only men to risk their lives in
the service of whatever the hell the current soldier is serving. The weapons
of the current era have equalized the power to kill - ability to kill is no
longer dependent upon size or upper body strength. Specious argument which has
nothing to do with the fact that women carry the womb, and therefore, the
baby. Nature has rigged the reproduction game in the favor of the woman
having the ultimate say....we feminists didn't rig this one, we had no
say in the matter. If you want it equalized, then get busy and create
both a safe method ( non-surgical and without anesthesia ) to remove the
fertilized egg and an artificial womb in which to grow the baby...then, if
the man wants the child, let him buy the womb and take the responsiblity.
Until then, the woman still gets to decide whether she wants to pay the
physical price of child birth.
Re: fire-fighters...I am inclined to agree on this one due to the need for
upper-body strength. However, has it occurred to you that the reason women
want these jobs is because of the pay - we have learned that when we get
a "MANS JOB", we get a decent salary. When we get a womans job, we get
$0.62 on the $1.00.
|
822.146 | | ISSHIN::MATTHEWS | OO -0 -/ @ | Thu Aug 27 1992 16:26 | 4 |
| <<< Note 822.145 by FORTSC::WILDE "why am I not yet a dragon?" >>>
-< Lord, I wish that you men got preggers!!!!! >-
"If men got pregnant then abortion would be a sacrament."
|
822.147 | | PCCAD::DINGELDEIN | PHOENIX | Thu Aug 27 1992 16:48 | 16 |
| Abortion was legalized to protect woman. not liberate men.
It ceases to amaze me that certain woman can continue to cast the blame
for all inequality and suffering on "the patriarchy".
My goal is to help create balance and equality in responsibility and
opportunity.
Nature is elemental law, society is an attempt at "humanizing" natural
law. IMO.
We as noters can continue to create narrow focus and argue details
forever, which is happening in this string, or attempt a neutral
position accomodating both camps. Some believe abortion is a crime.
For these individuals pre-marital sex with it's risks should be
avoided. For the rest of us accidental pregnancy is a reality to deal
with in a fair manner. Can you "ladies" help us define the "fair
approach" without using "you didn't have to go to bed with me "
argument.
|
822.148 | | DELNI::STHILAIRE | makes ya stop & wonder why | Thu Aug 27 1992 17:14 | 17 |
| re .147, no, I can't. I don't think abortion is a crime. I just don't
know if I, personally, could ever have one. I would be willing to tell
that to anybody who had ever wanted to have sex with me, but, for the
record, most don't bother to ask. Most don't even bother to ask if
birth control is being used, although in this day and age most men use
condoms due to AIDS, so it's a mute point unless the condom breaks.
Also, as far as abortions go, I believe, although can't give numbers,
that most abortions have occured because the father didn't want the
child, so it was legalized to protect the woman, yes, but *needed*
because of men's lack of responsibility and compassion.
So, Dan, when women disagree with you do always tell them their
thinking is narrow? It's a common tactic.
Lorna
|
822.149 | | PCCAD::DINGELDEIN | PHOENIX | Thu Aug 27 1992 17:20 | 6 |
| re: 148
Abortion was legalized to allow access to competent medical care for
woman who chose abortion "for whatever reason".
I'd rather have my thinking thought of as narrow but at least accurate
and based on available data.
|
822.150 | | SOLVIT::SOULE | Pursuing Synergy... | Thu Aug 27 1992 17:57 | 12 |
| I have been following this string with great interest... What caught my
eye was FORTSC::WILDE's appeal to consider/commit to the children for a
change, to place their welfare above/equal to our own. Then CSC32::M_EVANS
entered the discussion with the same theme (to me) in that children are so
important that you had better take the necessary steps to prevent their
conception if you don't want them. I have to applaud these two women and
anyone else who espouses the attitude of "What about the children?" before
their actions may result in pregnancy. Is it so hard to CARE about the
potential results of one's actions? I would say that "What about the
children?" is _the_ fundamental value of Family Values. I have counted at
least three times where CSC32::M_EVANS has reiterated the best course of
action/inaction. Why is this so difficult to comprehend?
|
822.151 | | RUSURE::MELVIN | Ten Zero, Eleven Zero Zero by Zero 2 | Thu Aug 27 1992 18:00 | 9 |
| >
> So, Dan, when women disagree with you do always tell them their
> thinking is narrow? It's a common tactic.
Lorna,
So why when I disagree with you, you say that 'I Need Help'?
-Joe
|
822.152 | | PCCAD::DINGELDEIN | PHOENIX | Thu Aug 27 1992 18:06 | 7 |
| re: 150
That's the whole point. What about the kids!!!
IMO kids deserve the love and committment of two loving parents and the
benefits of an extended family. Both parents have to want the children
to provide the healthy enviroment needed to raise them.
If the mutual committment is not there then everyone loses, including
the kid!
|
822.153 | | DELNI::STHILAIRE | makes ya stop & wonder why | Thu Aug 27 1992 18:08 | 5 |
| re .151, I don't think you need help because you disagreed with me, I
think you need help because you got so upset over a coffee mug.
Lorna
|
822.154 | | DELNI::STHILAIRE | makes ya stop & wonder why | Thu Aug 27 1992 18:10 | 9 |
| And, I disagree with you AND Dan Quayle. I think that a single, loving
parent, with enough money, can provide a good home for a child. Who are
you to tell my friend, Hector, for example, a hardware engineer, who
raised his son alone for the past 17 yrs., that he shouldn't have done
it because he didn't have a wife????? He loves his son and makes good
money. He's provided a good home. It doesn't always take 2 parents.
Lorna
|
822.155 | | PCCAD::DINGELDEIN | PHOENIX | Thu Aug 27 1992 18:22 | 10 |
| re: Lorna
I'd like to ask Hector if he and his wife committed to having the child
as a mutual decision? Lorna, many notes back I stated my attitude
about the issue you are bringing up - again!
I too am a single parent. Divorced young, paid support for Ten years.
After my ex died I took custody of my son and have raised him for
another ten years. My sons place was with me as Hectors son is with him.
My wife and I mutually decided to share responsibility for my son and
I'll applaude anyone who does same but imposition of such a "huge"
responsibility is what I've got a problem with.
|
822.156 | | GORE::CONLON | | Thu Aug 27 1992 18:37 | 10 |
| RE: .155
> I'll applaude anyone who does same but imposition of such a "huge"
> responsibility is what I've got a problem with.
Are you willing to pay higher taxes (to cover the expense of supporting
children of the men who get to walk away "scott free" after not taking
measures to insure they would not spread their seed without meaning to
do so?)
|
822.157 | | PCCAD::DINGELDEIN | PHOENIX | Thu Aug 27 1992 18:50 | 11 |
| re: 155
What about the female side of your equation? Your statment implies
men have all the responsibility to avoid the problem. As I've said over
and over again, the woman can say "NO" just as easily as a man can
abstain. There is no solution relating to "who's to blame".
Statistics I've seen show the present "dollar" cost of the total
welfare bubget fot AFDC is quite a small percentage. In my estimation
creating a system where the woman has to think about "going it alone
without financial obligation of the father" could "reduce" the need for
tax dollars. You can't turn people in need away but don't "punish" the
guy too! Two bad decisions are worse than one.
|
822.158 | | GORE::CONLON | | Thu Aug 27 1992 19:03 | 51 |
| RE: .157
> What about the female side of your equation? Your statment implies
> men have all the responsibility to avoid the problem.
Your argument implies (to me) that a man should have ZERO responsibility
for birth control and ZERO responsibility if he gets anyone pregnant
(unless he wants the responsibility.)
> As I've said over and over again, the woman can say "NO" just as easily
> as a man can abstain. There is no solution relating to "who's to blame".
Whenever this subject comes up, folks suggest that men control their
OWN reproductive capability by using their own birth control. However,
most men don't want to do this. They want men to have NO responsibilities
for birth control *nor* the consequences if a child results.
At this point in time, men make most of the money in our society, so if
we pass laws to keep men from being expected to support their offsping
(unless they choose to do so,) I think it will have a *huge* impact on
the amount of money the rest of society has to spend to support these
children.
Are you willing to pay extra taxes to cover these additional expenses
or not?
> Statistics I've seen show the present "dollar" cost of the total
> welfare bubget fot AFDC is quite a small percentage.
Considering how often people bitch about their tax dollars going for
Welfare, you'd think it was 99%.
In any case, if more men were allowed to walk away "scott free" after
getting women pregnant, the cost would increase.
> In my estimation creating a system where the woman has to think about
> "going it alone without financial obligation of the father" could
> "reduce" the need for tax dollars.
On the contrary. If men are given free reign to get as many women
pregnant as they want (without the risk of having to pay for any of
their children,) we'd see a far worse situation than we have now.
Women already *HAVE* the situation of "going it alone without the
father" (for everything but a small amount of money, if they get
anything at all) and unwanted pregnancies still occur.
If more men took responsibility for birth control (not instead of
women, but in ADDITION to women using birth control) - we'd have
less instances of accidental pregnancy (and less men who would
need to worry about "getting caught.")
|
822.159 | | CSC32::M_EVANS | hate is not a family value | Thu Aug 27 1992 19:23 | 19 |
| What may I ask is wrong with asking a man who says he doesn't want
children to take responsible steps to see that he doesn't? last time I
checked, barring turkey basters, women don't "get themselves pregnant.
However, women have had to take full responsibility for what hapened
should they wind up in a family way for centuries.
Does it really bother you all to be told the same thing that women have
been hearing for years? It is just that the equation is equalizing and
men can't just have a wife in every port and the hell with what happens
with their sperm after it is discharged into a warm convenient
receptical. Horror of horrors, men actually have to face some of the
same problems women have had with sex for millenia. Oh my!
Them high heels really pinch when they are shoved on your feet too,
don't they?
You to can learn to say no to protect your "honor"
Meg
|
822.160 | | SALSA::MOELLER | Republicans '92: Just say Noe | Thu Aug 27 1992 23:40 | 19 |
| WAY back in .37, I asked :
>Yes, well, certain persons in here continue to dodge the original
>premise/question : Does the male have responsibility if the woman
>deliberately becomes pregnant against his wishes ?
>No fair saying "FIRST, he should've..."
But I guess that answering the premise as stated in .0 wouldn't have
been as much fun, folks couldn't rant and rave and label others,
some of us would've had to forego repeatedly wishing men could get
pregnant, dragging in wage inequities, calling folks 'cold-hearted',
recreating the entire note on abortion, describing the pleasures of
pregnancy in detail, rehashing the welfare state and the state of
the courts, recommending certain folks never have sex again, or
preferably limit themselves to same-sex sex, and other inanities.
A pretty sorry display.
karl
|
822.161 | Taxes is a spurious argument. | PASTIS::MONAHAN | humanity is a trojan horse | Fri Aug 28 1992 03:13 | 28 |
| I don't know U.S. statistics, but I rather suspect that the "higher
taxes" argument is spurious.
I am sure the majority of fathers pay support anyway, and probably
many of those who don't, don't because they can't. Any legal action or
beaurocracy affecting any of the above is costing you taxes for no
possible benefit.
That leaves those who could pay but don't, and even there, there is
a trade off. As someone in a stable marriage I get a fair amount of say
as to how much of my income is spent on my kids versus how much is
spent on myself, and I also get a say in how it is spent. From what I
have heard, in the U.S. the court-required support payments are
occasionaly ridiculous, and rarely allow the non-custodial parent that
amount of say. A less rigid court system could well reduce the number
of non-paying non-custodial parents.
By now you are probably down to a pretty small percentage who could
support their children and don't. I only know personally of one case of
this type. He paid random and erratic cheques to the mother, and paid
the air fare for the kids to meet him once a year in Cyprus, but for
most of the time even *his* mother didn't know in which country he was
living. Legal action would have been futile, and state support when
the latest cheque from the father ran out was about the only practical
thing.
How much taxes does your country spend on things of which you don't
approve and which give less benefit to society than child support?
|
822.162 | | CSC32::M_EVANS | hate is not a family value | Fri Aug 28 1992 09:45 | 34 |
| re.161
It would be nice if it were only a small percentage of people that can
afford to pay something toward their child's support but don't.
Unfortunately, after 5 years, the percentage of people still holding up
their end of a support agreement drops drastically. (I dont have the
ercentage here, but it is something like 15% are still paying their
full commitment)
This is not only punishing children for being born, but is often
punishing me, and every other person in the US who pays taxess should
the custodial parent and children be pushed far enough down to wind up
on AFDC, or maybe just poor enough for foodstamps (currently 10% of our
population) The number of children living in poverty has consistantly
increased over the past 12 years, and has apparently become intolerable
enough to even have conservatives screaming for the wallets of a
deadbeat NCP.
I still say that anyone who feels that women are getting a free ride
regarding child support needs to spend a day in their local court
dealing with child-support cases. It will truly open your eyes as to
how some people feel about their offspring.
Again, if you don't want to make children take precautions. If
the risk or inconvenience of using condoms, or getting a vasectomy is
not something you are willing to do, either plan on being celibate as
far as women go, or taking the responsibility for any offspring you may
produce. Don't leave it up to fate, or expect any better out of your
partner than you expect out of yourself. And please, don't ever commit
the sin of looking at a new partner the morning after, and saying, "You
are using birth control, aren't you?" She may have been everybit as
carried away by passion as you were.
Meg
|
822.163 | | PCCAD::DINGELDEIN | PHOENIX | Fri Aug 28 1992 09:59 | 12 |
| Thanks Karl. I feel like I've been trying to walk a tightrope all
through this string with people constantly tugging on the wire.
I have to say it again. Men don't get woman pregnant!!! Sex is a mutual
decision implying mutual consent and responsibility. When accidents
happen why should the woman be allowed to impose such a huge
responsibility on the man when the original intent is to share the sexual
experience, not make babies.
|
822.164 | My take on the answer | SMURF::BINDER | Ut aperies opera | Fri Aug 28 1992 10:21 | 22 |
| Re: .160, in re (it is to be supposed) the original premise.
> Does the male have responsibility if the woman
> deliberately becomes pregnant against his wishes ?
Let me use an analogy to answer the question. This analogous situation
is, to me, a powerful argument because it goes beyond the question of
any *possible* contributory negligence, and contributory negligence
seems, really, to be at the heart of the responsibility question.
Who ends up losing money if a counterfeiter passes you a bogus bill?
You take it to the bank and complain, and they take it away. Forever.
With no payment and no recourse. You, the innocent victim, are the one
who gets stuck.
Life isn't fair, sometimes, but then who ever said it was? The premise
of making it as fair as possible strikes me as a good thing, and
accepting responsibility for your actions - whether or not they
resulted in what you intended, and whether or not you were deliberately
shafted - is how you make things fairer.
-dick
|
822.165 | | IAMOK::KELLY | | Fri Aug 28 1992 10:26 | 33 |
| Dan-
In your last statement, I perceive a contradiction....you say sex is
a mutual decision implying mutual consent and responsibility...then
when accidents happen, why should the woman be allowed to impose such a
huge responsibility on the man when the original intent is to share....
I guess I'd have to say that if sex is a shared responsibility, so
aren't the consequences.
For the most part, I have been agreeing with you. I think in cases of
entrappment, men shouldn't be forced into the support role. These are
probably only a very small percentage of pregnancy cases, though.
There are probably more accidents as a result of failed birthcontrol as
there are entrapment cases.
Statements inferring that men that don't want children should abstain,
take total responsibility for bc or get a vasectomy only grate on my
nerves to the extent that the persons making them IMO refuse to
acknowledge the point that women who don't want children should do the
same damn things! Accidents do happen and I do agree that men and
women participating in a sexual act, mutually concerned for one
another, are both responsible for the results. Even though I believe
this, it does not take the inequities out of the reproduction process.
With the exception of entrapment cases, I can understand one's outrage
when a woman decides to carry to term and the man refuses to help. but
nobody seems to be outraged that women can choose to abort even if the
man wants the baby. Although I recognice the issue of choice should
lie with the woman, I still feel that with the sole responsibility of
choice should come the sole responsibility of consequences. For this
woman, a pregnancy resulting in a child is *my* responsibility. If my
partner would like to be part of that responsibility, I accept it, but
if I choose to have the baby, I choose to be responsible for it,
regardless of my partner's wishes.
|
822.166 | | SOLVIT::SOULE | Pursuing Synergy... | Fri Aug 28 1992 10:57 | 23 |
| SALSA::MOELLER
.37,.160> Does the male have responsibility if the woman deliberately becomes
pregnant against his wishes ?
Yes, he does... If you were to discharge a firearm into the air
without the intent of hurting anyone, you would still be responsible
if the bullet killed/injured someone. Sex is a deliberate act for
which you have control and responsibility. To relinquish this control
and responsibility is to relinquish your Manhood. The Patriarchy
takes a dim view of men who have relinquished their Manhood and have
instituted "draconian" measures against these people. Teach this fact
to your children (especially the males) and you will have done them
a great service...
.162> CSC32::M_EVANS
Meg - If I were to look you up, you would be easy to find! Just look for
the woman who is "blue in the face"...
.163> I have to say it again. Men don't get woman pregnant!!!
To say this is to relinquish your Manhood...
|
822.167 | good topic | TOLKIN::DUMART | | Fri Aug 28 1992 11:13 | 24 |
| After reading everyone's reply I didn't see one...I may have missed it
...that addressed the issue of 'how do you know it's entrappment?' The
only one I could think of was if a woman said she was using the pill
and you were able to prove she never had a presciption or (I know
this hasn't been addressed as a man entrapping a woman... I 'm trying to
be equal here) if a man said he has had a vasectomy and he hasn't.
Most of the other birth control methods seem to have more of a physical
presence...such as a condom or sponge ...that is certainly obvious if
it isn't there. If such a claim could be adequately proven then maybe a
case could be made that
the other person would not be finacially responsible (woman or man).
However there is still the child to consider...how can we ensure that
the child is protected? How do we protect the innocence party?
It still comes back..IMHO...to the intial decision to engage in sexual
incourse in the first place. The premise is that you have two
consenting adults. Adult classification certainly implies that you are
aware of the potential consequences of the act and you still chose to
do it. Even with birth control you run the risk of pregnancy...not as
high grant you but you still run the risk. So as an adult you would
have to accept the consequences of your actions part of would be
financially support for any children that resulted from that action. I
believe that both adults are responsible from the moment they decide to
engage in sexual intercourse. Both have access to birth control and
both should use it and not just count on the other person.
|
822.168 | | AIMHI::RAUH | I survived the Cruel Spa | Fri Aug 28 1992 11:43 | 11 |
| Meg, your ablolutely right. If you WERE to spend time in the court
rooms as I have, you Just might learn alittle something. But I guess
you have not been much in the rooms of Injustice, execpt for your own
case. I have been in for many cases. Bottom line, yep, its not fair for
either parties. And right again, not fair for the children. But.....
When you force a NCP person into taking a second job, and forcing them
to live a lower standard of living in a rooming house, I guess your
right again to force him not to see his children because he is working
that second and third job. Or to force someone into bankruptcy because
he might have re-married to someone else. Broad brushing isn't going to
help either side of this debate.
|
822.169 | nice symbolism! :-) | DELNI::STHILAIRE | makes ya stop & wonder why | Fri Aug 28 1992 11:56 | 4 |
| re .159, Meg, "them high heels really pinch" is a great line! :-)
Lorna
|
822.170 | | RIPPLE::KENNEDY_KA | Winds of Change | Fri Aug 28 1992 12:12 | 6 |
| It seems to me that both partners are responsible for using birth
control. Then if there is an accidental pregnancy then both partners
are responsible. Of course, in a perfect world this would be true.
But this isn't a perfect world is it?
Karen
|
822.171 | | ISLNDS::YANNEKIS | | Fri Aug 28 1992 13:38 | 23 |
|
> Again, if you don't want to make children take precautions. If
> the risk or inconvenience of using condoms, or getting a vasectomy is
> not something you are willing to do, either plan on being celibate as
> far as women go, or taking the responsibility for any offspring you may
> produce. Don't leave it up to fate, or expect any better out of your
> partner than you expect out of yourself. And please, don't ever commit
> the sin of looking at a new partner the morning after, and saying, "You
> are using birth control, aren't you?" She may have been everybit as
> carried away by passion as you were.
>
> Meg
Meg, this is almost verbatum the pro-life argument against legal
abortions. Are you pro-choice? If so ... why should men and women be
held to a different standard about consequences of actions (and I'm
asking about the vast majority of abortions ... non-life threatening
and not the result of rape or incest)?
Thanks,
Greg
|
822.172 | | DELNI::STHILAIRE | makes ya stop & wonder why | Fri Aug 28 1992 13:53 | 5 |
| re .171, can't you understand that a woman can be pro-choice but still
not certain that she would ever want to have an abortion herself?
Lorna
|
822.173 | | CSC32::M_EVANS | hate is not a family value | Fri Aug 28 1992 14:19 | 41 |
| No this isn't verbatum the arguement against abortion. this is an
arguement that people need to take responsibility for their actions. I
am pro-choice, but pro-choice indicates that people need a range of
options. Abortion is often a responsible choice, but that doesn't make
it the right choice for everyone.
Punishing children because a woman chooses give birth to an unplanned
child rather than aborting it is irresponsible. (I am talking about
living breathing born children here) Not using birth control (Male or
female) is an irresponsible act unless you truly want the universe to
control your destiny, instead of yourself.
All I am asking is that men take the same responsibility for themselves
that women are expected to (equal rights, remember?) I am saying that
there is no living man here who can truly say he was "tricked" into an
unplanned child unless his condom broke, they have been available for
years. They are messy, inconvenient, and unspontaneous, but I still
prefer to think that men have enough control of their passions to take
precautions for themselves. Are you saying that I am wrong and that
men are actually slaves to approximately 2% of their bodies?
FWIW I haven't spent time on my dead-beat ex-partner, because luckily
I don't require the abuser's money for my child to survive will. I am
one of the fortunate women who makes enough money to support her
children on one income. I have, however spent time in court with friends
who are not as fortunate.
Remember, I consider not taking responsibility for one's children, be it
emotional, physical or financial, a form of child abuse. It is
punishing a child for something beyond his or her control, not the
ex-partner's.
I know that it is difficult for some people to realize that they share
an equal responsibility in an unplanned pregnancy, but saying that men
don't get women pregnant? Oh right, I forgot my pre-Alexandrian
anatomy. Babies grow from a woman spontaneously sometime after she
loses her virginity so that the babies can crawl up from the soil to
grow. This modern stuff about sperm coming from men and eggs coming
from women is so much superstition and faddish science.
Meg
|
822.174 | | PCCAD::DINGELDEIN | PHOENIX | Fri Aug 28 1992 14:37 | 8 |
| Meg,
How do you see a child being punished in your statement.
Is the man punishing the "potential child" when he is excluded from the
"choice" decision and not willing to financially contribute to the
results of the womans "choice".
Or is the woman punishing the "potential child" by knowingly bringing
the child into a "potentially fatherless world".
|
822.175 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | the dangerous type | Fri Aug 28 1992 14:50 | 8 |
| > All I am asking is that men take the same responsibility for themselves
> that women are expected to (equal rights, remember?)
That you should say this in this discussion is utterly laughable. You have
no intention of equal rights, only of equal responsibility. The woman making
the choice and the man being held responsible is NOT equality. Equality implies
at least a similar level of rights and responsibility; you want it to be entirely
one way.
|
822.176 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Fri Aug 28 1992 14:52 | 7 |
| Re: .175
It is unfortunate that many people use the term "equality" loosely, sometimes
as a synonym for "equal rights". They are, to me at least, not the same.
"Equal rights" means "the same rights", not "is interchangeable with".
Steve
|
822.177 | | CSC32::M_EVANS | hate is not a family value | Fri Aug 28 1992 15:00 | 19 |
| equal rights, yes. Men now have the equal right to make sure they use
some form of birthcontrol, if not the have the equal right of having
their world change forever, just like women.
BTW anyone who thinks pregancies, abortions or childbirth isn't a life
changing event needs a reality check. Do any of the men here know what
the actual surgery involved in a bortion entails, or do you all think
it is as easy as removing a sliver from your finger? The only
difference for women now, is that there are finally laws requiring men
to make a contribution to he results of an unplanned pregnancy, rather
than riding off into the sunset and tossing their sperm around at the
next stop and riding out, and so on and so on.
Maybe this requires careful thought by men, something my victorian
grandmother said men didn't possess the capability for, but I still
like to think men are as capable of far thinking as women and not the
raging bulls grandma said they were.
Meg
|
822.178 | | ISLNDS::YANNEKIS | | Fri Aug 28 1992 16:57 | 33 |
|
> re .171, can't you understand that a woman can be pro-choice but still
> not certain that she would ever want to have an abortion herself?
>
> Lorna
I'm sorry I don't understand the question ... Meg's argument seems
inconsistant with being pro-choice to me ... I said nothing of her
personal choices (or mine).
----------------------------------------------------------------
Meg,
I believe I hear your argument loud and clear but to me it seems
inconsistant ... I'm just trying to understand how it fits with you
being pro-chioce.
Am I correct in saying you believe ...in essence for men ... you play /
you pay ... if the unwanted outcome occurs pay the piper and do your
part until the munchkin becomes an adult (no matter what precautions
were used or whatprevious agreements existed).
Now flip to the women's side ... the argument seems to change to me ...
what happened to ... you play / you pay ... if the unwanted outcome
occurs pay the piper and do your part until the munchkin becomes an
adult. Why is the abortion out OK for women given this argument about
responsibility?
Thanks,
Greg
|
822.179 | | DELNI::STHILAIRE | makes ya stop & wonder why | Fri Aug 28 1992 17:24 | 9 |
| re .178, well, that makes 2 of us who don't understand Greg, because I
have no idea why you don't think what Meg said is consistent with being
pro-choice. From my viewpoint, what Meg wrote really has nothing to do
with whether she were pro-choice or not. It would seem to me that she
could hold the views she holds in regard to male responsibility for
offspring regardless of what her stand on abortion is.
Lorna
|
822.180 | And now we return you to... | SMURF::BINDER | Ut aperies opera | Fri Aug 28 1992 17:27 | 18 |
| Greg,
This is a digression from the prime topic here, but the question needs
to be answered.
I'm strongly opposed to abortion. Hence, I'm pro-life.
I'm also strongly opposed to anti-abortion laws. Hence, I'm
pro-choice.
To explain this seeming inconsistency, I'll point out that I have no
right to force my personal choices on anyone else. My fist stops at
your nose, as it were. To say that your right (the generic you) to
force a woman to carry an unwanted child to term is stronger than her
right to decide not to carry it is ludicrous. Who made you (again the
generic you) God for today?
-dick
|
822.181 | | CSC32::M_EVANS | hate is not a family value | Mon Aug 31 1992 09:55 | 45 |
| Greg,
Where did I say a woman doesn't pay and pay and pay for an unplanned
pregancy, no matter what choice she makes?
1. If she has an abortion, which isn't nearly as simple as filing
one's nails, she deals with the fact that some of the human race
considers her a murderess, will do their best to humiliate her on her
way in and out of a clinic, and that she has to decide how her
metaphysical beliefs fit in with an abortion. for some people it is
picking up the pieces and going forward, for others, abortion is
devistating.
2. If she doesn't want an abortion, but her partner does, she will go
through an inordinate amount of pressure from him. ("How could you do
this to us, are you sure it's mine? Well, babe, you know, we could
have had a future together, but, you had to go and do this....", etc)
If she decides to carry to term and keep the offspring, she can plan on
yearly court battles on support, and possible custody-grab attempts by
the same person, whose life she "ruined" by having that child.
3. If she wants an abortion, but her partner doesn't, she will have
him screaming, or worse at her, and he may set his family on her, to call
and harrass her every night and day, about thinking of murdering "his
baby."
4. If she give the child up for adoption, she is left wondering what
ever happened to her child (Particularly in a traditional closed
adoption) and the child always wonders why hir mother and father
rejected hir.
5. The ideal is both partners recognizing mutual responsibility and
working things out from there, however this must be becoming
progressively more rare, witness a batch of the responses in this file.
Greg, I still don't see where being as responsible as possible in
avoiding conception is an anti-choice statement, nor do I see asking
men to face up to the responsibilities of an unwanted pregnancy an anti
choice statement. In an ideal environment there are NO abortions,
because birth control is 100% reliable, safe, convenient, and
reversible, and all people use it. This isn't the case at this time,
so we need all other available options as well.
Megh
|
822.182 | | DELNI::STHILAIRE | makes ya stop & wonder why | Mon Aug 31 1992 10:21 | 4 |
| re .181, the voice of reason. I agree totally.
Lorna
|
822.183 | yet another definition of "child abuse"?? | CSC32::HADDOCK | Don't Tell My Achy-Breaky Back | Mon Aug 31 1992 11:29 | 13 |
|
For those of you who like statistics, the news (radio, tv) this
morning are reporting that FBI statistics show that 70% of
juvenile offenders come from single parent families. Especially
from families that _never_ had a father figure, and that the
percentage of _all_ crime committed by juveniles has skyrocketed
(don't remember exact number).
Personally I think that this is a rather sad commentary on
_both_ genders.
fred();
|
822.184 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Mon Aug 31 1992 11:39 | 12 |
| Um, I don't see how one can turn that around and suggest that single-parent
families are a contributing factor to crime. Consider that 100% of those
offenders were born to women - does that mean that every child born is likely
to become a criminal?
I would suggest that the increasing numbers of children in non-traditional
families are largely responsible for the increase in the statistic.
I agree that the rapid increase in juvenile crime is a serious problem, but
I don't think that pointing (or wagging) fingers is very helpful.
Steve
|
822.185 | All I know is... | CSC32::HADDOCK | Don't Tell My Achy-Breaky Back | Mon Aug 31 1992 12:38 | 16 |
| Steve,
All I know is that the FBI statistics and news reports made
a point of indicating that the lack of a father figure in the
home was a significant contribution to this problem. Maybe
(IMHO) because father's tend to be the tougher disciplinarian
in the home. Separate discipline from child abuse here (often
considered one and the same by "social engineers").
re finger_pointing:
I've noticed that NOW sure hasn't been any too shy in pointing
fingers.
fred();
|
822.186 | Opinions? | SALEM::GILMAN | | Mon Aug 31 1992 12:59 | 16 |
| What are the opinions regarding someone who gets pregnant on purpose
then if the baby is a boy has an abortion, but if a girl lets it go
full term to keep the baby?
IMO this is roughly the equivalent of what was practiced many years
ago: i.e. some farmers wanted only boys so kept the boys and killed
the girls at birth.
I know someone who is planning on following the first option....and
I have been unsucessful in talking her out of it.
What does that say about the mentality of the person? Is this 'wisdom'
in that the couple knows what sex child they are comfortable raising,
or simply SELFISH behavior in considering aborting a healthy boy.
Jeff
|
822.187 | | IAMOK::KELLY | | Mon Aug 31 1992 13:22 | 5 |
| re: .186
Not only selfish, but IMHO reprehensible.
Christine
|
822.188 | | HDLITE::ZARLENGA | Michael Zarlenga, Alpha P/PEG | Mon Aug 31 1992 13:45 | 13 |
| re:.185
Poverty is more closely linked to crime than single parent families.
The FBI will tell you that, the newspeople might not.
It's chic this year to bemoan the scourge of single parent families
as if they are all raising delinquents. Helps us to focus away from
the real problem ... poverty.
It's easier to say "hey, the problem is you don't have a father" then
to say "hey, we you need to get you to work so you will have some money
to feed and clothe and raise healthy, well-rounded children."
|
822.189 | Time to take a second look?? | CSC32::HADDOCK | Don't Tell My Achy-Breaky Back | Mon Aug 31 1992 14:18 | 16 |
| Re .188
I didn't get any exact quotes, but I did get the impression
that the statistics took into account single parent families
of all financial status. After all not all single parent
families are living in poverty.
As far looking at one issue, the issue of a non-father family
has been *totally* ignored in favor of anything-else-you-can-
think-of for years. At least partially (IMHO) to soothe the
irresponsible conscience of members of both genders, and partially
because it does not fit the political agenda of most Politically
Correct groups. Maybe its time we took a second look at this issue
as at least *part* of the problem.
fred();
|
822.190 | Just more of the same | PCCAD::DINGELDEIN | PHOENIX | Mon Aug 31 1992 14:23 | 11 |
| If you're not in the position to raise children, don't have them.
If you don't have a committed partner, don't have kids.
I know, I know, who made me god for today! Nobody.
It's just what responsible, intelligent people usually use to dictate
when to bring children into the world.
IMO ignorance and immaturity lend more to the problems. Poorly founded
reasoning creates the cycles that perpetuate the forementioned
symptoms.
You can argue what's the root cause of the symptoms but we all pay for
the results in one form or another. To be trusted and live up to the
trust is a result of maturity.
|
822.191 | $ set user/mode=(worldly_wise,cynical) | SMURF::BINDER | Ut aperies opera | Mon Aug 31 1992 16:20 | 8 |
| Bear in mind that the FBI is under control of the Executive branch of
the gummint. In this election year when the repubs are so busy
espousing the radical right's version of "family" values and sneering
at parents who are single by choice, it seems eminently credible that
the FBI would help to do the dirty work required to get their boss
reelected.
-dick
|
822.192 | | CSC32::HADDOCK | Don't Tell My Achy-Breaky Back | Mon Aug 31 1992 16:33 | 7 |
|
re .191
So the White House controls the FBI and the librerals control
the press....So what else is new ;^).
fred();
|
822.193 | oh fer Pete's sake!!! | FORTSC::WILDE | why am I not yet a dragon? | Mon Aug 31 1992 21:01 | 34 |
| > Abortion was legalized to allow access to competent medical care for
> woman who chose abortion "for whatever reason".
> I'd rather have my thinking thought of as narrow but at least accurate
> and based on available data.
so, if abortion is legal, you want the law to allow a man to force a woman
to have an abortion? Look, basic biology is a FACT. You cannot change
it. If you want everything to be "FAIR", then you are going to have to
invent a different method of reproduction. If you cannot do that, then
PROTECT yourself from pregnancy - don't rely on someone else to do it,
do it yourself...because, once the woman is pregnant, you BOTH have a
problem - or society has to pay FOR you - and, quite frankly, there isn't
enough money to go around as it is. You cannot say that a woman is
the only person responsible for the child if she keeps it - if, in doing
so, you put a responsiblity upon her shoulders that she cannot carry
alone. There isn't an answer that will satisfy you on this one - you
want to play and not to pay if you don't feel like it. But it isn't
fair to the rest of us - who have NO say in whether you have sex with
someone or not - to make us pay for your "mistakes".
So, no, you don't get this one. If you father a child, and the woman
doesn't want to abort, you are now a responsible daddy. You pay.
If the woman is that much a stranger to you that you don't know how
she is going to act on this one prior to getting into the missionary
position with her, then you are a damned fool for taking your pants off.
Period.
This stuff should ALL be worked out exhaustively prior to sex...if not,
then you deserve to be nailed. If you were lied to, then WHY DIDN'T
YOU TAKE MEASURES TO PREVENT PREGNANCY YOURSELF...and if you did, and
you still are paying, then I'm really sorry that you got lied to AND
that your birth control failed - but, hey, it isn't likely to happen
to very many men, so the odds ARE on your side...and the children born
to such men still need the money.
|
822.194 | | PASTIS::MONAHAN | humanity is a trojan horse | Tue Sep 01 1992 03:13 | 9 |
| re: .183
>70% of juvenile offenders come from single parent families.
From another note I have learned that for most of these families
there is a second parent who ought to be in prison even if he isn't, so
maybe it's just heredity?
I don't think my terminal has the character set for the expression I
would like to put here.
|
822.195 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | the dangerous type | Tue Sep 01 1992 08:49 | 48 |
| >so, if abortion is legal, you want the law to allow a man to force a woman
>to have an abortion?
I don't think anyone has said this.
> Look, basic biology is a FACT.
That's exactly what we've been arguing all along.
>If you want everything to be "FAIR", then you are going to have to
>invent a different method of reproduction.
God, this sounds familiar.
>You cannot say that a woman is
>the only person responsible for the child if she keeps it - if, in doing
>so, you put a responsiblity upon her shoulders that she cannot carry
>alone.
Here's where your logic falls apart. You are saying that if we allow men
as much choice as we allow women, then men are unfairly placing responsibility
upon women. I am tempted to giggle, but this is a serious topic. How can
you ask for equality with a straight face and then say in the very next breath
that you only want equality where it suits you?
When a woman becomes pregnant, she has the right as defined by law to have
an abortion. To terminate her responsibility with nary a second glance, at
her whim, and there's nothing anyone can do to stop her. You accept this as
being right and good. Yet you resist the obvious parallel when it comes to men.
You steadfastly REFUSE to allow men to have a parallel choice. You insist that
women be the only ones allowed to make choices after conception, and somehow
manage to rationalize that this is consistent with equality. You also berate men
for managing to get into this position in the first place (a behavior you
heartily decry when it's done to women.)
If a woman chooses to have a child even knowing her partner is not willing
to bear the burden of parenthood, then SHE and only she is placing
"responsibility on her shoulders" that she may not be capable of carrying alone.
SHE is making the choice to have the child in full knowledge that her partner
is unwilling to make the sacrifices necessary to be a parent. In making that
choice, she is implicitly accepting the responsibility of raising that child
on her own. Nobody is forcing her to accept responsibilities she does not
want except herself.
Why are some people so reluctant to acknowledge that equality includes actual
drawbacks for women with the many benefits? Or is this equality Orwellian?
The Doctah
|
822.196 | | IAMOK::KELLY | | Tue Sep 01 1992 09:42 | 13 |
| re: 193
And conversely,
If you become pregnant, carry to term and the man doesn't want to
be a daddy, you are now the responsible mommy. You pay. If the man
is that much a stranger to you that you don't know how he is going
to act on this one prior to getting into the missionary position with
him, you are a damned fool for taking your pants off. Period.
re: .195
Exactly!
|
822.197 | the child must come first | FORTSC::WILDE | why am I not yet a dragon? | Tue Sep 01 1992 13:24 | 48 |
| re: last two
you are still trying to pass off the welfare of the child as a non-issue.
This isn't an argument about what the man and woman deserve - it is an
argument about what the kid GETS. What the kid deserves. The child isn't
a guilty party in this scenario - and, yet, your determination to free
the man from responsibility is BOUND to deny the child....the simple fact
is that the child benefits when there is more money available for medical,
dental, and educational needs - and, with both parents contributing, there
is more money.
I really do understand the frustration a man feels when forced to be a father
because a woman cannot bring herself to have an abortion...he gets forced
into the responsibility whether he wants it or not. And, if things were
fair, there would be some other answer...but, there really isn't. I
have seen women wrestle with the question of abortion - it is painful,
and it is so personal that the woman often doesn't KNOW herself that she
cannot do it...until she is faced with the real option. This is the crux
of the matter. And, once she finds she cannot have an abortion, then the
resultant child is a responsibilty for BOTH parents. It is NOT fair - I
have no argument with that. However, the child deserves the financial
benefits of both parents - and to deprive the child of that is NOT
fair to either the child or the rest of the human race. Poverty is the
root cause of so much human misery - even if you have no love for the
woman, cannot you feel enough love for the child to make SURE he/she
doesn't suffer in poverty????
It is probably more "fair" to the man to allow him to walk away from his
financial responsibility to the child in these cases...but it is NOT
fair to the child. We have evidence of our unwillingness to support
children all around us today - it is time for us all to grow up and put
the welfare of the children FIRST. If you make a baby, be prepared to
support the child.
So, I still stand on my original opinion. If you don't want children,
PROTECT YOURSELF...if the woman doesn't want children, she should also
protect herself - but, if you insist upon going to bed with strangers,
you have no idea of her level of denial, her understanding of her own
reproductive system, or her ability to actually HAVE an abortion, should
she get pregnant...so, be as sure as you can be - wear a condom or have
a vasectomy - whichever is more comfortable to you. If all protection
fails, then think of the child - and be ready to support his/her needs.
Maybe, you will get lucky and the woman will choose to abort - but maybe
she won't. If it is any comfort to you - whichever decision she makes
will cost her in ways that you cannot imagine.
Nothing makes it okay to deny the child your financial support. It is
the only ADULT thing any of us can do....
|
822.198 | | CSC32::M_EVANS | hate is not a family value | Tue Sep 01 1992 14:13 | 12 |
| re .198
I will add to the you owe a child financial support, to you owe your
child as much moral, physical, and loving support as you can possibly
manage as well.
Please stop punishing children to get revenge on another adult. It is
juvenile, and doesn't help the real issue, the fact that there is a
child out there with half of your genetic makeup. It deserves at least
a little less disposability than a puppy or kitten you are tired of.
Meg
|
822.199 | | ISLNDS::YANNEKIS | | Tue Sep 01 1992 14:14 | 78 |
|
Meg ... from your note .181 ...
> Where did I say a woman doesn't pay and pay and pay for an unplanned
> pregancy, no matter what choice she makes?
You never said this exactly but I'll get back to this
> The ideal is both partners recognizing mutual responsibility and
> working things out from there
I couldn't agree more
> Greg, I still don't see where being as responsible as possible in
> avoiding conception is an anti-choice statement, nor do I see asking
> men to face up to the responsibilities of an unwanted pregnancy an anti
> choice statement. In an ideal environment there are NO abortions,
> because birth control is 100% reliable, safe, convenient, and
> reversible, and all people use it. This isn't the case at this time,
> so we need all other available options as well.
I couldn't agree more ... but in .162 you said
> Again, if you don't want to make children take precautions. If
> the risk or inconvenience of using condoms, or getting a vasectomy is
> not something you are willing to do, either plan on being celibate as
> far as women go, or taking the responsibility for any offspring you may
> produce. Don't leave it up to fate, or expect any better out of your
> partner than you expect out of yourself. And please, don't ever commit
> the sin of looking at a new partner the morning after, and saying, "You
> are using birth control, aren't you?" She may have been everybit as
> carried away by passion as you were.
>
> Meg
In my words this says ...
as a male unless you're willing to face the 18 year repsonsiblity of the child
you may father (even by failed birth control) then remain celibate.
To me this sounds remarkably like ...
as a female unless you're willing to face the 18 year (or 9 month if you choose
adoption) responsibilty of the child you may mother (even by birth control)
then remain celibate.
The lattter is frequently heard rhetoric from pro-life folks ... I saw a
parallel to your words in .162 ... I guess we disagree ... that's OK.
*********
Lorna,
Each response you have written in this string commenting to me (or to responses
to me) has IMO carried an attitude that I guess comes from what you believe I
think about Meg's personal beliefs and from what you think about my personal
beliefs.
I asked Meg a question because I find her to be a very interesting and
articluate noter and I was interested in her view of how her words were
different towards men than those from a pro-lifer towards women ... nothing
more, nothing less.
As for my beliefs ... my experience has been that I'm am more pro-choice (using
a broader definition of the term) for women than the majority of feminists with
which I have met and discussed choice topics.
Greg
|
822.200 | y | PCCAD::DINGELDEIN | PHOENIX | Tue Sep 01 1992 14:21 | 27 |
| re: 197
Can you give any suggestions as to how to deter "gene hunting"
behavior?
Your argument is solid in regards to once there is a "child".
The view of "double standard" regarding abortion is still open and
unresolved in all this discussion. I agree that in the present legal
context the woman holds all the cards. It seems possession is 100% of
the law and once pregnancy occurs the woman has free reign on the
destiny of all parties. Can fairness be attained? Doubtful.
The oustanding question that I've raised and not many have entertained
is "can a viable deterent to imposition of parental responsibility be
formulated?".
Biological fact dictates the woman has the final say, so in that context
it only seems logical that she must take the lions share of
responsibility to avoid unwanted pregnancy? Is there an alternative to
this view besides making the man ultimately responsible to avoid the
unwanted pregnancy? I'm asking these questions to try and move the
"shoulds" and "blaming" attitudes to the side.
The child poverty question is a major problem today. Some couples pump
out babies because that's what there parents did years ago when you
needed lots of hands to manage the farm. Some men feel keeping there
woman pregnant is "macho". Some woman feel "incomplete" without a baby
and will do anything to have one. Teen pregnancy is rampant and some
feel a baby is a "badge of honor". All of these situations are creating
major social costs and consequences we all must grapple with.
Ideas?
|
822.201 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | the dangerous type | Tue Sep 01 1992 15:52 | 38 |
| >you are still trying to pass off the welfare of the child as a non-issue.
Funny you should say this; I was thinking the same about your position.
Either you don't seem to realize or you don't seem to care that your scenario
ENCOURAGES women who lack the wherewithal and resources to have children to
do just that. Even though they are incapable of properly providing for children,
your policy encourages them to have them anyway, because, after all, at least
we can force the father to foot the bill.
The welfare of the child is best met when all parties agree to care for
the child. When one party is forced by the law to be a parent, that person
is RARELY a positive influence for the child. Yet to you its just a simple
matter of economics. Two incomes are better than one.
I asked a question a few score of notes ago that was completely ignored.
And for good reason. The answer is not what people want to hear.
Why should a woman be allowed to make her decision about whether to keep
a child in an economic vacuum? That's stupid, and encourages decisions
based on a subset of the facts. It also skews the results in one direction-
the wrong one!
> cannot you feel enough love for the child to make SURE he/she
>doesn't suffer in poverty????
This is a non sequitur. Tying a child's welfare to the financial status of
her/his father guarantees no such thing. The fact is that there are no
guarantees in this life, financial or otherwise. And you seem to be completely
ignoring that many children from single parent families suffer from an entirely
different but no less meaningful kind of poverty; a poverty of love, a poverty
of emotional support, a poverty of positive role models and influences.
Swell, mom can pay the bills, but she's never home and the kid runs the
streets at night at 12 years old. Great compromise.
Society should not be encouraging women who cannot take care of children
to reproduce. But that's what your policy does.
|
822.202 | | CSC32::M_EVANS | hate is not a family value | Tue Sep 01 1992 16:14 | 65 |
| Greg,
let me try this again. In matters of choice all people have a place
where their fates wind up in the hands of the goddess. Being
pro-choice, I still believe that the first responsibility of all
indulging in sex with a possibly fertile partner is to minimize the
risks of having their choice taken away.
In the case of both sexes, the avoidance of an unplanned pregnancy
with any partner is the first line of choice and responsible behavior.
Once a conception has occurred, both partner's choices become extremely
limited, and they will both be impacted, as well as a potential third
party.
In the case of the woman, her mental, emotional, and physical health
are suddenly at risk. In a man there is mental, emotional and
financial health at stake. I am sure that both partners have that
gawd-awful sinking, trapped felling on discovery of an unplanned
pregnancy. ( I know the feeling and it isn't good)
At this point there is little either partner can do but discuss this.
Because of biology (Is anyone out there trying to come up with a way
for men to be pregnant?), the big decision is in the woman's hands.
All a man can do is try to put in input on his feelings (something
both should have talked out long before they hit the sack the first
time)
In the case of the woman, she has several choices.
1. Terminate the pregnancy. This may be the best choice for some, and
it can be a disaster for many. This will believe it or not also wind
up impacting the male partner in some fairly heavy ways as well.
2. Carry the pregnancy to term and utilize the adoption option. This
is often not a good choice for the woman, the man or the child. There
are often horrible feelings all the way around.
3. Carry the child to term without the support of the father and keep
it. This is a tough pregnancy and delivery to go through, but it has
been done for centuries. At this time, the woman actually has some
support from the government in at least getting some financial support
from the father involved. However, judging by the bitterness of some
of the men in this file, that may be all the child gets from hir
"father."
4. Both parents come to terms with the pregnancy and each other, and
work together to support the child in all ways, even if they don't live
together. Best of all worlds for the child if both parents have some
level of maturity.
Because of Biology the best time for a man (and a woman) is to exercise
their choices in advance. If you don't as a man, you are putting your
fate in the hands of the universe, and in that of a woman whose
hormones may well kick in protectively and you are out of luck.
You still have a choice, you can badger, beat or bludgeon the woman who
you obstensively cared enough about to have sex with into having an
abortion. It is one of the most common reasons I have heard from women
when I volunteered in a clinic for having an abortion. She won't like
it, and I can almost guarantee that your relationship with her has just
come to a screeching halt, even if you still stay together for a few
months. But hey, then you are only out 500 bucks and a woman. big
deal.
Meg
|
822.203 | you defined the dynamics | FORTSC::WILDE | why am I not yet a dragon? | Tue Sep 01 1992 16:30 | 129 |
| <<< Note 822.200 by PCCAD::DINGELDEIN "PHOENIX" >>>
-< y >-
> Can you give any suggestions as to how to deter "gene hunting"
> behavior?
first, I submit that this practice is very infrequent - and when it
is practiced, the gene-hunter, as you so charmingly put it, is more prone
to go buy a nobel-prize-winner's contribution than to seduce a man she
meets in a bar...they have the artificial insemination centers where the
genes of purported "superior" men are available. I'd bet that there
is less than 1% of the pregnancies out there that are a result of this
behavior, however she gets the contribution. Second, even if the
practice WAS an issue in this country or the world - the deterrent is
to take long enough to know your partner BEFORE you have sex that you
know the REASON your partner has chosen you as her/his partner. You
cannot criminalize pregnancy - any way you cut it, that punishes the
child. You cannot demand that women get un-pregnant because it is
what YOU want (or what I want, or what anyone else wants) without
giving someone control of the woman's body. You cannot deny the child
support - the child didn't cause the problem. So, there is no way
to "deter" this behavior...except for the fact that a woman raising
children by herself is the most overworked, underpaid, under-appreciated
human being in the world - and she has to want to be a mommy one hell of
a lot to be willing to try and do it alone, knowing beforehand that the
help and support won't be there.
> Your argument is solid in regards to once there is a "child".
> The view of "double standard" regarding abortion is still open and
> unresolved in all this discussion. I agree that in the present legal
> context the woman holds all the cards. It seems possession is 100% of
> the law and once pregnancy occurs the woman has free reign on the
> destiny of all parties. Can fairness be attained? Doubtful.
> The oustanding question that I've raised and not many have entertained
> is "can a viable deterent to imposition of parental responsibility be
> formulated?".
Hey - if you don't like the present balance, start supporting the
establishment of artificial means to support the pregnancy to term, and
THEN men can demand a say - if a woman could turn over the zygote to an
artificial womb without incurring the expense (health-wise) of pregnancy
in order to give the man some say in the matter of pregnancy, then you might
have a legal stand. However, I don't envision a world in which a man will
ever be able to force termination of a pregnancy except in the case of a
husband terminating a pregnancy in order to sustain the mother's life -
or save it. And that only happens if the woman is unable to speak for
herself.
> Biological fact dictates the woman has the final say, so in that context
> it only seems logical that she must take the lions share of
> responsibility to avoid unwanted pregnancy? Is there an alternative to
> this view besides making the man ultimately responsible to avoid the
> unwanted pregnancy? I'm asking these questions to try and move the
> "shoulds" and "blaming" attitudes to the side.
READ MY LIPS.....both adults in an intimate relationship must take
responsibility for avoiding what they don't want. Period. The fallacy
you are stuck on is that the woman will somehow be willing to avoid
pregnancy if you DON'T want a baby...even if she does, at least
subconsciously, WANT a baby. You must be responsible for yourself...
if you don't want a child, then don't allow one to happen - take the
measures necessary to protect yourself from unwanted fatherhood. YOU have
established a scenario during this string of notes in which the woman and
you are in an adversarial position to one another. I did not define the
dynamics of the imagined relationship - you did. Why a man would bed with
a woman who is in such a position to him is not something that I can
understand...however, YOU made up the rules. In this scenario, you cannot
trust the woman to protect YOUR interests when you are assuming her interests
are different. IF you did choose you partner wisely, then you both KNOW
how you feel about possible children - and you are BOTH operating in a
responsible manner....and, in my mind, that means you are BOTH protecting
yourselves from unplanned pregnancy. The pill can be disturbed by ingestion
of antibiotics...the diaphragm might slip, the condom might slip off...but,
if at least two means of avoidance are used, then the odds are, as said
earlier, in your favor that much more. I assure you, a woman who knows
her own body, who is not playing "magical thinking" with herself about what
she is doing (if I admit I am having sex, I am a "bad girl" - so I don't
take birth control measures and that makes me a "good girl" because I
didn't PLAN to have sex) WILL take protective measures. Her life is
forever altered by pregnancy....and she knows it. Unfortunately, so many
women have been trained to be shamed by their own desires that they will
lie to THEMSELVES about what they are doing - and these women end up
pregnant more often then anyone would like. Just ask the men who bed them.
> The child poverty question is a major problem today. Some couples pump
> out babies because that's what there parents did years ago when you
> needed lots of hands to manage the farm. Some men feel keeping there
> woman pregnant is "macho". Some woman feel "incomplete" without a baby
> and will do anything to have one. Teen pregnancy is rampant and some
> feel a baby is a "badge of honor". All of these situations are creating
> major social costs and consequences we all must grapple with.
> Ideas?
yes, first adjust your attitude a little. The VAST MAJORITY of unwanted
pregnancies in this country are due to teenagers having sex without a decent
understanding of their own bodies, the fact that they are MORE FERTILE now
than they will ever be, and that they cannot avoid pregnancy by the man
"pulling out" before orgasm. If we would stop the magic thinking that
"children will not have sex if we don't mention sex", we could much more
easily get a grip on the problem. We are aculturated to view teenagers as
children - 200 years ago, teenagers were married folks having babies. The
biological model is the same...the urges are the same. WE have the problem.
Blunt, no-nonsense sex education, every year of school from grade 5 on up
would be a start. Cheap, reliable, AVAILABLE birth-control would also
be a powerful tool. Once a child is capable of reproduction, Nature starts
urging that reproduction....this isn't an issue of religeon, it is an
issue of biology. As much as we might try and teach children to abstain
from sex...well, let me put it this way, Jerry Falwell had a "bun in the oven"
when he got married - and if there ever was a dedicated, "just say no to sex"
advocate, he is it....however, as a young man, he couldn't make it..why
do we expect other children to have more willpower than good ol' Jer?
Yes, there are children of poverty, raised to believe that their current
life is all that they will ever see - who think that having a baby is
good - they sometimes get enough welfare to get their own place to live,
you see - and when you are living in crowded conditions with others who
are damaged by grinding poverty, that can be very tempting. However, if
the USA wants to prevent this kind of pregnancy, then we have to address
the issues and problems of poverty - and that takes a committment of
dollars and manpower that the voters of this country do not seem willing
to pay. The real tragedy is that so many see it as just a problem of
them having babies that nobody wants - and refusing to see that they
wouldn't be having unwanted children if they could envision a life that
promised them a chance to dream or achieve something of their own. WE
are responsible for the children - they are a substitute for dreams that
we have denied their parents.
|
822.204 | so, your answer is? | FORTSC::WILDE | why am I not yet a dragon? | Tue Sep 01 1992 16:53 | 91 |
|
> Either you don't seem to realize or you don't seem to care that your scenario
>ENCOURAGES women who lack the wherewithal and resources to have children to
>do just that. Even though they are incapable of properly providing for children,
>your policy encourages them to have them anyway, because, after all, at least
>we can force the father to foot the bill.
my scenario deals with the reality. I don't believe that we should encourage
pregnancy without the financial ability to support the child...but, other
than education of the real cost, and education about birth control, and
ready availability of a safe, cheap, effective birth control, I have no
other option for you. I will not support forcing poor women to have
their tubes tied - it would be a solution you might support, but it isn't
something I can choose and live with muself. I don't think that any woman
can become property of the state without setting all women up for the
same fate. A woman who is owned by anyone or anything is a slave...and,
as a woman, I will not support slavery for my own gender. Period. I
DO support education and birth control - free to anyone who asks. What
other solution would you propose? Criminalizing pregnancy? and what
happens to a woman who gets pregnant and THEN finds out she is fired or
laid off from her job...is she as much a criminal as the woman who wasn't
working first?
> The welfare of the child is best met when all parties agree to care for
>the child. When one party is forced by the law to be a parent, that person
>is RARELY a positive influence for the child. Yet to you its just a simple
>matter of economics. Two incomes are better than one.
I have never argued that a single-parent situation is BETTER for the child.
I have simply been operating within the limits established in the base
note. Once a woman is pregnant, what happens then....well, if the man
doesn't want to be a daddy, he won't act like one, nor can I make him act
like one...but, if he won't be there for the kid, he can at least help support
the child. It isn't perfect, but it is a better answer than the man doing
nothing. Of course, the ideal answer is for the man and woman to be
responsible BEFORE the pregnancy occurrs....I believe if you read my
replies to this string, I have said this too...BOTH use birth-control and
there is no problem at all.
> Why should a woman be allowed to make her decision about whether to keep
>a child in an economic vacuum? That's stupid, and encourages decisions
>based on a subset of the facts. It also skews the results in one direction-
>the wrong one!
if you are suggesting that the woman be forced to abort, then SAY IT...if
you are suggesting that the woman be forced to put the child up for
adoption, THEN SAY IT....don't pussyfoot around, say what you think is
a possible solution for this situation. I categorically refuse to accept
that a father who won't pay child support deserves to be custodial parent.
If he is angry enough about the child to refuse to feed and clothe and
provide shelter for the child, I do not trust him to take care of the
child...so, what's YOUR solution to this problem? Stop pointing fingers
and come up with an answer - one that doesn't force women into slavery....
> This is a non sequitur. Tying a child's welfare to the financial status of
>her/his father guarantees no such thing. The fact is that there are no
>guarantees in this life, financial or otherwise. And you seem to be completely
>ignoring that many children from single parent families suffer from an entirely
>different but no less meaningful kind of poverty; a poverty of love, a poverty
>of emotional support, a poverty of positive role models and influences.
so...again, what solution do you offer - once the child exists? Avoiding
the pregnancy is the best idea for all - but in an imperfect world, it
doesn't always happen this way. Ideally, both parents should be involved
with the children, and both should choose to have the children TOGETHER.
We aren't dealing with ideals, but the scenario offered in the base note.
If the child exists, then the best that CAN BE must be offered...and that
is a one-parent home in which adequate food, proper shelter, and warm
clothing are available...all these things take money.
> Swell, mom can pay the bills, but she's never home and the kid runs the
>streets at night at 12 years old. Great compromise.
so, you define another, better option once the child is HERE - a reality.
> Society should not be encouraging women who cannot take care of children
>to reproduce. But that's what your policy does.
No, society should be educating each and every one of us to respect the
needs of children and the facts about our bodies in a non-shaming manner
so that we all could have healthy attitudes about sex and reproduction.
But, society isn't doing that - and woman are still using magic thinking
like , "it won't happen if we have sex just once", or "I won't get
pregnant if he pulls out", or "I won't get pregnant if I don't have an
orgasm"....and babies happen when they shouldn't. If you have a suggestion
on stopping them from happening, other than education and reliable
birth control, then put it on the table. Pointing fingers and making
accusations about my failure to solve the problem when you have offered
no concrete answers is the cowards way out.
|
822.205 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | the dangerous type | Wed Sep 02 1992 08:43 | 2 |
| Continually repeating the same old thing is not the same as advancing the
discussion. This is becoming overly redundant.
|
822.206 | | ISLNDS::YANNEKIS | | Wed Sep 02 1992 10:25 | 7 |
|
Meg (re. 202)
Fair enough ... see you in the next topic.
Take care,
Greg
|
822.207 | | PCCAD::DINGELDEIN | PHOENIX | Wed Sep 02 1992 11:18 | 16 |
| There is no argument that the best way to manage this situation is to
avoid the problem in the first place. Total agreement.
The dileman remains.
Pre-defined roles will continue to drive the views of the system and
many women "men will be responsible as providers, woman will be
responsible in child-rearing". Womb territoriality will be the
impenetrable barrier to equal rights for men. As I stated earlier,
just because the woman has "control" of the development phase of the
fetus she will be allowed to impose a life-long responsibility on any
man that is unfortunate enough to encounter "magical thinking" that may
or may not be influenced by "the goddess". My a@@. More like
irresponsible and irrational thinking IMO. This horse is turning into a
formless mass of flesh. I'd like to discuss pragmatic deterents but we
get mired in idealogy. Serious problems require serious solutions, not
rationalizations to exempt equality. IMO
|
822.208 | | CSC32::M_EVANS | hate is not a family value | Wed Sep 02 1992 11:43 | 5 |
| May I ask why so many men in this forum are so resistant to using
condoms? They really are cheap insurance. Are you all saying you
don't want to be responsible for anything including yur own lives?
Meg
|
822.209 | | RUSURE::MELVIN | Ten Zero, Eleven Zero Zero by Zero 2 | Wed Sep 02 1992 12:16 | 6 |
| > May I ask why so many men in this forum are so resistant to using
> condoms? They really are cheap insurance. Are you all saying you
> don't want to be responsible for anything including yur own lives?
Who said they were? I hear people saying that the WOMEN should be using
birth control as well. They should be. Wouldn't you agree?
|
822.210 | | DELNI::STHILAIRE | makes ya stop & wonder why | Wed Sep 02 1992 12:17 | 14 |
| re .199, Greg, sorry you weren't interested in my reply, but IMO you
should realize that once you enter a reply in a Notesfile, that is open
to all Digital employees, there is a chance that someone whom you don't
consider to be "articulate and interesting" may respond.
I would suggest that if you are only interested in reading the thoughts
of one particular person that you send that person vaxmail, and that
way nobody else can express an unwanted opinion on the issue.
However, I'll try to remember not to ever reply to one of your notes
again.
Lorna
|
822.211 | | PCCAD::DINGELDEIN | PHOENIX | Wed Sep 02 1992 12:24 | 7 |
| re 208
Condoms have their place relating to safe sex and male birth control
but to a man it is un-natural. Once a relationship has developed enough
trust and the risk of STD's is eliminated natural sex is nice to have.
"sex using a condom is like gourmet dining with a balloon around your
tongue!"
Condoms are ok but not forever!
|
822.212 | | RIPPLE::KENNEDY_KA | A song, a dance & a wave...bye! | Wed Sep 02 1992 12:37 | 4 |
| And taking birth control pills, using a diaphragm, or chemical
spermicides is natural huh?
Karen
|
822.213 | | CSC32::M_EVANS | hate is not a family value | Wed Sep 02 1992 12:41 | 13 |
| I have always said that woman who don't want children should use birth
control. However, men who don't want children should also use BC to
protect themselves as well.
I would like to know about what is natural with the pill which fools a
body into believing it is a little bit pregnant and has serious side
effects for many women, what is fun about inserting a diaphram or cap
and what is natural about using foam, or other spermicides on a woman.
Why do you expect her to take measures that you refuse to take to
protect yourself?
Meg
|
822.214 | | AIMHI::RAUH | I survived the Cruel Spa | Wed Sep 02 1992 12:45 | 2 |
| Come on Meg, this is a finger pointing exercise not a discussion with
you. I am sure many men are using protection against unwanted births.
|
822.215 | | RIPPLE::KENNEDY_KA | A song, a dance & a wave...bye! | Wed Sep 02 1992 13:04 | 9 |
| George,
I disagree. Fred pointed out that many men feel that using a condom is
"unnatural". Meg and I pointed that using birth control pills and
spermicides is also "unnatural." Meg and I have also stated, clearly,
that it is both the peoples responsibility to use birth control if they
want to prevent pregnancy. Why is this so hard to understand?
Karen
|
822.216 | by the way | HDLITE::ZARLENGA | Michael Zarlenga, Alpha P/PEG | Wed Sep 02 1992 13:25 | 2 |
| The use of condoms still doesn't address the inequality that exists
once a woman becomes pregnant.
|
822.217 | | CSC32::M_EVANS | hate is not a family value | Wed Sep 02 1992 13:37 | 11 |
| Mike, I can't change biology, only show people that there are ways to
reduce biology's impact on them. If you don't like the fact that there
is a significant biological impact on women in regards to pregnancy and
consider it unfair, be my guest and find a way for men to get pregnant,
carry to term and give birth.
All I can recommend for men is to take enough responsibility for their
lives and finances, and protect themselves from unwanted pregnancies
just as if their lives depended on it the same way women normally do.
Meg
|
822.218 | | RUSURE::MELVIN | Ten Zero, Eleven Zero Zero by Zero 2 | Wed Sep 02 1992 13:40 | 16 |
|
> I disagree. Fred pointed out that many men feel that using a condom is
> "unnatural".
That does not mean that they do not use condoms, does it?
> spermicides is also "unnatural." Meg and I have also stated, clearly,
> that it is both the peoples responsibility to use birth control if they
> want to prevent pregnancy.
Well, it comes across (at least to me) as only men have to have protection.
I do agree that both are responsible.
>Why is this so hard to understand?
Who here is having a hard time understanding?
|
822.219 | | ISLNDS::YANNEKIS | | Wed Sep 02 1992 13:42 | 24 |
|
Lorna,
I am interested in your replies and I hope you do not feel inhibited
from doing so ... that certainly was not my intention. My first words
directly to you in this string were a request for clarification. (BTW
I find your notes very interesting because the strength of your notes
often stirs the pot ... it make notes smore fun!)
The first words in this string you spoke in my direction were ... "Can't
you see" ... to me that came across condensending ... and the replies
that followed IMO also had strong negative tones also.
I asked Meg the question because I was suprised at what Meg wrote I
wanted to hear her comments to the inconsistancy I saw in her words ...
I chose Meg specifically because her noting almost always seems very
consistant to me.
IMO balancing a pro-choice position with father's rights is often trcky
and I was hoping to explore the grey area. I also thought the question
may be of interest to the greater noting community. Most of my notes
tend to inquire about consistancy or try to analyze data.
|
822.220 | so? | FORTSC::WILDE | why am I not yet a dragon? | Wed Sep 02 1992 15:57 | 7 |
|
>Who said they were? I hear people saying that the WOMEN should be using
>birth control as well. They should be. Wouldn't you agree?
who didn't agree? the real problem here is the failure of the men in
this discussion to come up with any ideas - they have complaints, but no
solutions...
|
822.221 | | ESGWST::RDAVIS | But in that you're not charmless | Wed Sep 02 1992 15:58 | 6 |
| > The use of condoms still doesn't address the inequality that exists
> once a woman becomes pregnant.
I'll say.
Ray
|
822.222 | how can we change it? | FORTSC::WILDE | why am I not yet a dragon? | Wed Sep 02 1992 16:21 | 45 |
| > The use of condoms still doesn't address the inequality that exists
> once a woman becomes pregnant.
the problem with this discussion - other than the skewed scenario under
which we were driven to discuss the issues surrounding unwanted pregnancies...
is that the men are standing back and saying that things aren't fair - and
are NOT offering any solution that would be fairer. The only conclusion
I can reach is that there is no other, more fair to both parties, solution
than to AVOID the problem in the first place....and once the problem exists,
there is no nice solution that pleases everyone. Hardly a revelation...it
is what Meg and I have been saying from the start.
One issue that surprises me in this discussion is the male's resistance to
taking measures to prevent pregnancy....it is the woman who has the womb
so she is to be responsible for preventing pregnancy...and if she gets
pregnant, she should pay for everything - and if the kid suffers, too bad.
Well, this is kinda silly to me as it shows damned little instinct to
protect yourself. Although sex with a condom may not bee as much fun as
sex without - if you are going to get into a major snit and refuse to be
adult and take responsibility for the results of failed birth control,
you'd better get used to condoms....even if the woman takes the pill,
pregnancy occurs - and a child is real regardless of your intent.
Of course, life would be just fine if the man could force an abortion,
or force the woman to carry to term - on his whim - but no man here will
speak this out loud because he knows that makes the woman a virtual
slave to him. And, we could say that men can walk away from a pregnancy
he didn't want - and the taxpayers will foot the bill to make sure the
child has the basic necessities of life - but, I don't think you can
convince the taxpayers out there, me among them, that this is fair to
US...so, we are back to the quandry.
The bottom line is that sex has a potential price for all parties...
and, if you want to minimize the price you pay, you need to be a
responsible player AT ALL TIMES - protect yourself. The message
is the same to BOTH men and women - protect yourself, both by using
birth control....and by CHOOSING your partner wisely. Discuss the
issues surrounding pregnancy BEFORE you are faced with the problem.
Know thyself...and know the other person as well.
The inequities are not going to change...they are driven by our biology
and the need for women to have autonomy - control over their own bodies.
I dare say, men would not allow the state to tell them to get a vasectomy
so I cannot imagine that you would expect the state, or you, to be able
to dictate that a woman change her body at your whim.
|
822.223 | | ISLNDS::YANNEKIS | | Wed Sep 02 1992 16:30 | 36 |
|
> who didn't agree? the real problem here is the failure of the men in
> this discussion to come up with any ideas - they have complaints, but no
> solutions...
How about ...
* National Committe on Families drawing from NOM, NOW, etc to provide a
blueprint within 100 days for family issues.
* National Health Insurance which includes free reproductive counseling
and birth control.
* High Schools offer sex education that talks about birth control and not
just about plumbing.
* Increased research into alternative birth control methods.
* Quicker response to delinquant NCP ... this could be an adjustment if
the NCP were laid off ... this could be automatic payroll deductions
if they are a deadbeat parent ... whichever the case much quicker
intervention.
* Quicker repsonse to CP withholding visitation ... no great ideas how.
* Abortion rights settled at US level .... hopefully pro-choice.
* Roe v. Wade Card Pamphlet Developed ... like the Miranda card ...
anyone providing any pregnenacy counseling must provide this pamphlet
which describes all options as netrually as possible ... if not
provided you're closed down.
* Etc
Come November just write in ... Gregory C. R. Yannekis
|
822.224 | | LAVETA::CONLON | | Wed Sep 02 1992 16:40 | 37 |
| RE: .222
> the problem with this discussion - other than the skewed scenario under
> which we were driven to discuss the issues surrounding unwanted
> pregnancies...is that the men are standing back and saying that things
> aren't fair - and are NOT offering any solution that would be fairer.
The question seems to be "What should we do about the fact that women
have the *capability* of getting pregnant on purpose to force 18 years
of child support onto men?"
The logical answer is: "Convince more men to take responsibility/control
over the distribution of their sperm."
Then we get all the arguments about why this isn't really the answer
(since women have the option of abortion.)
The most frequent suggestion I've seen is to threaten women with the
possibility of getting NO SUPPORT WHATSOEVER (to what purpose, tho?
Is the point to starve small children to death as an object lesson
for women who get pregnant against the wishes of the men in their
lives? I don't know.)
It all comes back to - What should men do about the fact that a woman
has the capability of getting pregnant on purpose against the man's
wishes? Men should protect and control their sperm (to keep from
having to support OR walk away from children they did not wish to
help create.)
Many men consistently reject this solution, though. It seems that
many of them would rather have ZERO responsibility for birth control
*or* child support unless they so choose (leaving women holding 100%
of the responsibility for arranging abortion, adoption or 18 years
of nurturing and support, whether they conceived by accident or not!!)
And this is seen as "equality"????? Since when are "0.0" and "100.0"
equal??
|
822.225 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | the dangerous type | Wed Sep 02 1992 16:55 | 35 |
| >Of course, life would be just fine if the man could force an abortion,
>or force the woman to carry to term - on his whim - but no man here will
>speak this out loud because he knows that makes the woman a virtual
>slave to him.
Aside from the needless repetition and redundancy present in your last
few notes, this utter fabrication really takes the cake. NOBODY has said
or even means that men should make women's decisions for them. All that
has been said is that women should consider ALL of the fact when making their
decision, AND THEN LIVE BY IT. This, apparently, means slavery to you. Perhaps
"slavery" to their own decisions.
>And, we could say that men can walk away from a pregnancy
>he didn't want - and the taxpayers will foot the bill to make sure the
>child has the basic necessities of life - but, I don't think you can
>convince the taxpayers out there, me among them, that this is fair to
>US...so, we are back to the quandry.
You make it sound like this "unfairness" to the american taxpayer is
the fault of the men who exercise _their_ choice rights. Actually, you should
be pissed off at the women who are forcing THEIR choices to be paid for by
the american taxpayers. But you insist that it's the men's fault. Typical.
Women should have only the ultimate choices, not the ultimate responsibilities.
And you even agree that this isn't fair, but shrug your shoulders as if to
rebuke women for bringing children into the world that they haven't the slightest
chance of being able to take care of is the worst thing possible.
>The inequities are not going to change...they are driven by our biology
That's a laugh. The inequities are almost entirely societally imposed,
NOT a matter of biology. Indeed, it has been amply demonstrated that
equity can be attained on a far more equivalent basis, save your insistence
that the woman's choice begin considered to be more equal than the man's
choice.
|
822.226 | good start | FORTSC::WILDE | why am I not yet a dragon? | Wed Sep 02 1992 16:58 | 19 |
| re: .223
okay. some of the sugestions (in fact, most) sound just fine to me. And,
with men participating in the discussions, we might get rid of some of the
self-defeating resentment that is coloring human interaction these days.
I would really like us to stress sane, blunt, no-holds-barred sex education
to the youth of this country. Repeat it every year, make it mandatory,
and make the expense associated with child-rearing an integral part of
that education. You can tell them, "Just say no" as much as you want...
but make sure they know what they are saying no to. And, while we are
at it, child care and development classes should also be included. Child
abuse and neglect are inherited diseases - education could help this
problem as well.
See, finally a man speaks up....and nobody threw rocks at him...it wasn't
so bad, bas it?
D 8^}
|
822.227 | | LAVETA::CONLON | | Wed Sep 02 1992 17:02 | 33 |
| Lately, we've been hearing a lot about "telephone" scams (such as
luring people to call '900' numbers for some reason, then charging
$50 for a minute or two on the line WITHOUT GETTING THE OBJECT OR
SERVICE THAT WAS OFFERED AS THE LURE.)
A friend of mine called a 'psychic' at a 900 number recently (she
was in a strange mood and made a mistake she will never repeat.)
The line was BUSY several times (and, I kid you not, SHE WAS BILLED
FOR THE CALL EACH TIME SHE GOT A BUSY SIGNAL.) She finally reached
a 'psychic' and they spoke for 6 minutes (she timed it) - and my
friend was billed for $100. She complained to AT&T and they were
very sorry for her plight, but she had to pay the bill!!!!!
What can be done about this?? Of course it's wrong. Of course it's
a scam. It's also free enterprise.
What people can do is to refrain from ever calling a 900 number. (In
my friend's case, she had '900' blocked from her phone to keep her son
from accidently falling into the same trap and costing her thousands of
dollars some month.)
If a man worries that a woman he meets (who agrees to have sex with
him without knowing him very well) might be after his sperm, the man
can protect himself by controlling where his sperm goes. Even if a
man worries that a woman he knows very WELL is after his sperm, he
can protect himself by controlling where his sperm goes.
I don't leave my most valuable possessions lying on the sidewalk (to
get some air) while I'm at work all day. It would be wrong if someone
stole them, of course, but I protect myself by controlling where my
possessions go. It's important for men to control and protect their
sperm.
|
822.228 | | LAVETA::CONLON | | Wed Sep 02 1992 17:08 | 10 |
| RE: .225 The Doctah
> Women should have only the ultimate choices, not the ultimate
> responsibilities.
How does an "ultimate responsibility" differ from the responsibilities
involved with raising a child (by oneself) for 18 years?
Is a man's money (as opposed to the money it costs the woman to raise
the child) the only thing you define as "ultimate responsibility"???
|
822.229 | so, okay, you get to rebuke all you want | FORTSC::WILDE | why am I not yet a dragon? | Wed Sep 02 1992 17:09 | 23 |
| re: .225
okay, you get to rebuke the women having children as much as you want...
I have not problem with that. That doesn't take care of the children.
Now, once you are through rebuking the women, what do you suggest we do
about the children?
Somehow, I don't think you are reading my replies very well..or you are
just enjoying throwing negative crap into the discussion. I am not
now, nor have I ever, nominated any woman who gets pregnant for
sainthood - she is stupid to do it...there is that easier to understand?
She is especially stupid to RISK getting pregnant by some jerk who is
going to say that he isn't responsible for the pregnancy so she has
to pay for it all herself...however, ONCE SHE IS PREGNANT, AND PRESUMING
YOU AREN'T GOING TO FORCE HER TO ABORT, HOW DO YOU PROPOSE TO TAKE CARE
OF THE CHILD IF SHE CAN'T DO IT????
What words of the above question don't you understand? They are all
in plain English - do you speak another language perhaps?
I don't see you offering any solution - rebuking the woman isn't
going to make the pregnancy go away. It is unlikely to even prevent
any pregnancies. Any other ideas?
|
822.230 | | AIMHI::RAUH | I survived the Cruel Spa | Wed Sep 02 1992 18:28 | 8 |
| .229
Perhaps you might be talking to the wrong croud. There are many
responisble men who are in a read mode of this file. There are many who
are like the type of man that you have described that have filled much
of the lifers of welfare. Perhaps you should be looking upon them for
your preaching.
Signed a very responsible man
|
822.231 | | HDLITE::ZARLENGA | Michael Zarlenga, Alpha P/PEG | Wed Sep 02 1992 20:43 | 11 |
| re:.217
Biology doesn't need to be changed, but the choices available to the
man, once the woman is pregnant could be expanded.
The woman can absolve herself of any and all obligations, financial,
physical and emotional, if she so desires. The man is pretty much
limited to waiting to find out what she does and finding out what
he's required to do, by law.
That's not exactly an equitable situation, if you ask me.
|
822.232 | please elaborate on that | FORTSC::WILDE | why am I not yet a dragon? | Wed Sep 02 1992 20:59 | 27 |
|
> Biology doesn't need to be changed, but the choices available to the
> man, once the woman is pregnant could be expanded.
excuse me....what choices do you suggest we offer? The biology of the
situation means that either she controls her body (her choice - for better
or worse), or we give the man control of her body (his choice reigns supreme).
...now, if she is NICE about it, she will CONSIDER his feelings; she
might even make promises that she intends to KEEP.... but, barring
enslaving the woman, she is, in the final analysis, the one carrying the
fetus - and she is the one who has to either NOT HAVE AN ABORTION, or HAVE
AN ABORTION....and she is the ONLY one who chooses what she will do with
her body. It just doesn't work any other way. I'm honestly perplexed when
I see you or others say that the rules oughta be different, BUT you aren't
talking about forcing the woman to have an abortion/not have an abortion...
how else can they be different? This is a question that is the REAL issue
under discussion here - and noone will say out loud what you MUST be thinking,
or are we women must be overlooking some facet of biology which is certainly
not taught in any books I've seen. How do you make it different?
If you want the woman to be punished because she refuses an abortion that
the man wants....how do you propose we do THAT without punishing the
child that results as well?
I REALLY do wish that men could get pregnant at least 50% of the time...then
the game would be played on a level playing field. Then, maybe there could
be some equitable way to set up the rules differently.
|
822.233 | | GORE::CONLON | | Wed Sep 02 1992 21:03 | 25 |
| RE: .231 Mike Z.
> The woman can absolve herself of any and all obligations, financial,
> physical and emotional, if she so desires.
This is bunk. The only way a woman could be completely absolved of
all these things would be to travel backward in time (to keep the
pregnancy from ever happening.) Otherwise, women are forced to bear
the responsibility of abortion, adoption, or parenting (either alone
or with a partner.) No way do women get off scott free.
> The man is pretty much limited to waiting to find out what she does
> and finding out what he's required to do, by law.
How lucky for him that he doesn't face the choice of painful surgery
on his sexual organs (or 9 months of a life-threatening medical
condition that will end with many hours of excruciating pain to
deliver a child whom he would either raise for the next 18-21 years
or long for during his entire life after giving it up for adoption.)
> That's not exactly an equitable situation, if you ask me.
I agree. Perhaps there is some way to get fathers to undergo painful
surgery or a lengthy, dangerous medical procedure on their sexual organs
to make it a bit more equal.
|
822.234 | | HDLITE::ZARLENGA | Michael Zarlenga, Alpha P/PEG | Wed Sep 02 1992 22:02 | 17 |
| .232>excuse me....what choices do you suggest we offer?
Allow the man a way to sever any claims to the child, along with all
future financial responsibility.
The woman can accomplish this via abortion.
Why not allow the man similar options as those avaliable to the woman?
.232>The biology of the
.232>means that either she controls her body (her choice - for better
.232>or worse), or we give the man control of her body (his choice reigns supreme).
Listen, I'm not suggesting the man be given "control of the woman's
body." I _am_ suggesting he be given control of his own destiny, in
much the same way the woman is in control of hers.
|
822.235 | who said life was fair? | EARRTH::MACKINNON | | Thu Sep 03 1992 09:10 | 22 |
|
re -1
yes the women can accomplish severing claims to the child
along with financial responsibility by getting an abortion
because there is no child that results. If a child results
though why is it justified to let either parent walk away?
I think it stinks that some men get screwed in situations
like this. It sure isnt any picnic for the women either.
However, once the child is born, that child's needs should
be paramount. Why should the child be punished for actions
of both its parents?
This is not a fair situation any way you look at it. Until
such time that men are able to bear children it will continue
to be an unfair situation. The only thing that we can do
about it until that time is protect ourselves during sex.
Both partners have to protect themselves.
|
822.236 | life isn't always fair | DELNI::STHILAIRE | makes ya stop & wonder why | Thu Sep 03 1992 10:14 | 21 |
| re .233, amen.
re .235, I agree. It seems to me that everytime I've ever complained
about something not being fair, there has always been someone around -
usually a man - to point out that, afterall, "life isn't fair."
In my opinion, that's the bottom line here. Life isn't always fair,
and politics are usually personal. Perhaps there is no way that this
could ever be fair. In that case, I would put the interests of the
child, and myself first, over the interests of the man in question.
That's life, and realizing that, I think people should live
defensively. As others have said, there is almost no way that a man
using a condom, or a man who has had a vasectomy can get anybody
pregnant.
It seems to me that most of the men here are asking women to put the
interests of the men first, before their own concerns, or the child's
concerns. My answer to that is - why the hell should we?
Lorna
|
822.237 | stop hosing them and they won't be deadbeats! | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | the dangerous type | Thu Sep 03 1992 10:29 | 8 |
| > It seems to me that most of the men here are asking women to put the
> interests of the men first, before their own concerns, or the child's
> concerns.
What instead you are doing is putting the woman's interest first and foremost,
then the child (sic), then the man. But the unfairness in this is just too
damn bad, because the woman's interests come first. And then the whining
about "deadbeat dads" starts.
|
822.238 | | GORE::CONLON | | Thu Sep 03 1992 10:50 | 44 |
| RE: .237 The Doctah
> -< stop hosing them and they won't be deadbeats! >-
Men should stop hosing themselves.
Getting back to the situation with '900' numbers for a second...
Now that I know that at least some of these 'services' charge for
a busy signal, NO WAY will I ever allow myself to be tempted to
call one. (I was pretty convinced before I heard this, but NOW,
I'm absolutely adamant about it.)
When men hear stories about other men who have been forced to pay
child support for 18 years, they freak (i.e., get very upset.)
But do they say, "Boy, I'm NEVER, EVER(!!!) having sex again without
my own protection"...???
Nope. They most often say, "Well, if SHE says she's on the
pill, then I'll take her word for it [even though any mistake
or deliberate action she might take to get pregnant means a
very, very, VERY drastic consequence for the man.]
"Condoms just don't feel natural. Oh well - time for sex.
YEE-HA!!!"
Let's face it, Mark. Many/most men put their own sexual pleasure first
before any possible risks to their future income (and only whine about it
when sex is over and they find they must actually PAY for this ultimate
irresponsibility.)
As often as men screw up (no pun intended) on this score (no pun
intended again,) even though the risks of such behavior are horrendous
- imagine how much worse it would be if we sanctioned it by telling
men to screw their brains out all over this land (and not to worry
about ever having to be held accountable for children they help create.)
Men need to control and protect their sperm. If both parties used
birth control, the incidences of birth control failure would be far,
far fewer than they are now. If most men even participated in birth
control (such as being involved with frequent checking of IUDs or
helping with sponge preparation or pill taking, if condoms are not
being used) - it would help. Many/most men don't seem to want this
responsibility. Instead, they want 0.0% responsibility (leaving women
with 100.0% responsibility) in the name of "equality." (Yeah, right.)
|
822.239 | say what? | FORTSC::WILDE | why am I not yet a dragon? | Thu Sep 03 1992 11:20 | 23 |
|
> Allow the man a way to sever any claims to the child, along with all
> future financial responsibility.
>
> The woman can accomplish this via abortion.
>
> Why not allow the man similar options as those avaliable to the woman?
so, you are suggesting the man be able to force the woman to have an abortion,
even though we have many people living in this country who equate such an
action as MURDER - and that is NOT suggesting the man be given control
of her body????? Well, just what WOULD be giving him control - performing
the abortion himself??? If he forces an abortion on her, he is controlling
her body - and she is enslaved. That's where the biology comes in.
> Listen, I'm not suggesting the man be given "control of the woman's
> body." I _am_ suggesting he be given control of his own destiny, in
> much the same way the woman is in control of hers.
wrong - it isn't that clean and easy. If he wants to control his destiny,
he has to protect himself BEFORE the fact of pregnancy.
|
822.240 | | VALKYR::RUST | | Thu Sep 03 1992 11:44 | 28 |
| Re .239: The "equivalent" option for the man would be (presumably
through a pre-intercourse agreement of some kind) to state that if a
pregnancy should result, he has no interest in its outcome, and will
pay half the cost of an abortion. If the woman chooses not to abort or
give up for adoption, she agrees to support the child herself and seek
no further support from the man (who would also agree not to seek
custody or contact with the child).
Human nature being what it is, very few people go to such lengths
before engaging in sex [I can see it now; that first date, the
candlelight, the romantic dinner... and the "what to do in case of
pregnancy" contract. ;-)], and even the best-intentioned agreement of
this sort is likely to fail at times. If the woman, having chosen to
keep the child and support it herself, should lose her job, and must
appeal to some government agency for support for the child, the agency
may well want to try and track down the father for some help,
regardless of any agreement between the couple. Or if the man changes
his mind at a later date and wants contact with his biological child -
and/or the child eventually wants to find the father - should that be
categorically denied because of "the agreement"?
There are always going to be hard cases, difficult decisions, painful
choices... Seems to me the best we can do is to educate everybody about
the possibilities, make safe preventative measures known and available,
and try (this is the tough part) to make responsible behavior the
"cool" thing...
-b
|
822.241 | its reality | EARRTH::MACKINNON | | Thu Sep 03 1992 11:52 | 28 |
|
re -1
I dont think he is saying that we should allow the man to force
the woman to abort. I think what he is saying that if a woman
can absolve herself of the parental responsibilities then why
shouldnt the man be able to do so as well. Course my interpretation
could be wrong. The man can absolve himself of parental
responsibilties by protecting himself to prevent conception.
Fact of the matter is that the women has two different times
when she can absolve herself of the responsibilites while
the man only has one which happens to be before conception
whereas she can do so before conception as well as after
conception occurs. Fair? No but its reality and nothing is
going to change it.
The real issue here is that simply due to nature, men can not
get pregnant and once a pregnancy occurs the decisions are
solely the woman's choice. Now knowing this to be the truth,
if any person does not want to become a parent, they must
be responsible for their own protection. If it is a male
the only time he can do this is before conception. If
he chooses not to do so then he has made his choice
and live with the consequences whatever they may be.
|
822.242 | | IAMOK::KELLY | | Thu Sep 03 1992 11:53 | 18 |
| I agree with .240 about the equivilent option.
Intellectually I understand the arguments about men "protecting"
their sperm etc., but it still says to me that the claim is women
don't need to be held to the same standard of self-preservation in
this matter and that irritates me, the inherant implication that a
man is irresponsible if he doesn't use a condom or keep looking over
his partner's shoulder to make sure she's not lying to him or misusing
her form of bc. When is the woman responsible? And while probably
helpful, to me it implies that a woman is unable (too stupid) to take
care of her own needs for protection when the man is urged to use the
condom or help check her IUD,sponge, pills, etc. Where are the people
urging women to make sure men wear the condom,, use it as part of your
foreplay? And the comments about men being too selfish to use one
due to inhibiting pleasure, I know lots of women who feel the same
way about condom use, so men aren't the only selfish ones when it comes
to sex. Why do men need to control their sperm, but women don't need
to control their eggs?
|
822.243 | | VALKYR::RUST | | Thu Sep 03 1992 11:57 | 8 |
| Re .242: Whoa, whoa. Nobody has said that men should take
responsibility while women do not need to; there are plenty of replies
urging women to be responsible, too. But even if _both_ parties use as
many methods of birth control as there are (the mind boggles; umpteen
layers of rubber, plus chemicals - sex a la Union Carbide?), accidents
can _still_ happen.
-b
|
822.244 | we've said this before | LUNER::MACKINNON | | Thu Sep 03 1992 12:14 | 13 |
|
re 242
I think its implied that a woman is taking the responsibility.
My interpretation is that men must also be taking this responsibility
if they do not want want to become a parent. Afterall, two forms
of bc far lessen the chances of pregnancy. I don't particularly
like the feel of a condom,yet will not have sex with a man unless
he has one on even while I am on protection. To me though a condom
is more a protective measure against aids or sexually transmitted
disease than a form of bc. Both parties should be equally responsible
in using birth control.
|
822.245 | the messages she gets may be the problem... | FORTSC::WILDE | why am I not yet a dragon? | Thu Sep 03 1992 12:19 | 33 |
| re: .242
In this society, there are many very negative messages fed to women about
their own sexuality - a woman who prepares for sex beforehand is often
perceived, by both herself and her partner, as "bad" - a "loose woman",
a "cheap whore", and "easy lay"....in this climate, many women end up
sabotaging themselves when it comes to avoiding unwanted pregnancy...
after all, if she plans her reproductive protection, she is being
a "bad girl"....if she is "swept away by passion", she is the victim of
her own emotions...and still a "good girl". These are not conscious
thoughts, nor do they lead to conscious decisions to not protect herself,
but they often have a negative effect on the woman's life. When you start
talking about reproductive behavior in this society, you cannot overlook
the impact of these messages. Your partner may not be protecting herself..
And she certainly will find it very difficult, if not impossible, to demand
that you use a condom - it isn't what "nice girls" do, you see....
This is certainly not true for every woman, but it can be true for many...
so, if you want to be sure to avoid pregnancy, protect yourself - and,
if your partner has a healthy view of her own sexuality, she will be
protecting herself as well.
Noone here has suggested that women shouldn't protect themselves...but,
as the number of unwanted/unplanned pregnancies in this country indicate,
many do not, or they do not protect themselves adequately, or the method
chosen fails at a critical time. The number of unwanted pregnancies
could drop to near 0, if men ALSO began to take responsibility for this
issue.
Protect thyself....or prepare to pay, and pay, and pay....perhaps this
is a message that would reach the young men out there and convince them
to prevent pregnancy? It might even save some lives - HIV doesn't
seem to get past condoms....
|
822.246 | | RUSURE::MELVIN | Ten Zero, Eleven Zero Zero by Zero 2 | Thu Sep 03 1992 12:38 | 32 |
| >
>Noone here has suggested that women shouldn't protect themselves...but,
>as the number of unwanted/unplanned pregnancies in this country indicate,
>many do not, or they do not protect themselves adequately, or the method
>chosen fails at a critical time. The number of unwanted pregnancies
>could drop to near 0, if men ALSO began to take responsibility for this
>issue.
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
Huh? If all these women are being the 'responsible' ones, and are using birth
control, WHY are there some many unwanted pregnancies? I cannot believe there
are THAT many failures of birth control methods.
>Protect thyself....or prepare to pay, and pay, and pay....perhaps this
>is a message that would reach the young men out there and convince them
>to prevent pregnancy? It might even save some lives - HIV doesn't
>seem to get past condoms....
Perhaps the EXACT same message should be sent to women as well. If they are
not protected then THEY should pay, and pay, and pay.... Perhaps this is a
message that would reach young women out there and convince THEM to prevent
pregnancies? In takes two genders; why shouldn't BOTH take the responsibility.
And before you ask "Who is saying it is only the man", I will answer with 'you'.
In my opinion, you are laying the blame for unwanted pregnancies solely on the
male and that blame comes across (to me) in many of the notes you have entered
here. If a woman does not want to get pregnant then SHE should take appropriate
action on her part (from using BC to telling the man to get lost). In the same
vein, the man should take appropriate action for BC if he does not want to deal
with the results of unwanted pregnancies. But it is BOTH that need to; not just
men as many of the writings here suggest.
|
822.247 | | HDLITE::ZARLENGA | Michael Zarlenga, Alpha P/PEG | Thu Sep 03 1992 12:54 | 31 |
| .235> -< who said life was fair? >-
What I'm asking for is equity, not fairness. Life can be equally
unfair to all involved, yet still be equitable.
But wait a second ... isn't equity the _primary_ goal of the feminist
movement? Or is the equality you strive for selective in nature? Maybe
you only want equality for those situations in which you're at a disad-
vantage ... for those where you have an advantage, the status quo bias
is Ok, eh?
.235> because there is no child that results. If a child results
.235> though why is it justified to let either parent walk away?
Most curious logic ... are you proposing that adoption is somehow
wrong? Doesn't that allow the parents to walk away after birth?
.235> Both partners have to protect themselves.
Like I've pointed out twice already, this rhetoric avoids addressing
the inequity that exists once the woman becomes pregnant.
I sat through 200+ notes worth of begging this particular question,
and thought that maybe the participants were finally ready to address
this issue, but, prehaps I was wrong.
Give me a buzz when y'all get tired of the "you gotta protect yourself"
rhetoric and you're ready to discuss real life and what happens when
birth control fails. Until then, this fluff doesn't interest me ...
|
822.248 | | DELNI::STHILAIRE | makes ya stop & wonder why | Thu Sep 03 1992 13:09 | 22 |
| re .247, Mike, for some people adoption is wrong. It's not wrong for
other people, if that's their choice, but there are people who could
never give their own child up for adoption, so it should never just be
assumed that adoption is an option for every woman.
As far as the feminist agenda goes, I have no idea what the feminist
agenda is on the issue we're discussing, I only know what I think about
it.
Also, re .246, nobody has suggested that women not take responsibility.
We are suggesting that *both* men and women take responsibility, since,
in this string, it is the men who are complaining. Most women my age
were told we were completely responsible for preventing unwanted
pregnancy. The concept of being responsible for unwanted pregnancy
simply is not new to most women. We take it for granted. For years
most men left it entirely up to women. Now, it seems that when men are
asked to take an equal responsibility, they resent it.
Lorna
|
822.249 | | SNBEAM::ZARLENGA | Michael Zarlenga, Alpha P/PEG | Thu Sep 03 1992 13:28 | 10 |
| .239>so, you are suggesting the man be able to force the woman to have an abortion,
Of course not.
.240> Re .239: The "equivalent" option for the man would be (presumably
.240> through a pre-intercourse agreement of some kind) to state that if a
.240> pregnancy should result, he has no interest in its outcome, and will
.240> pay half the cost of an abortion. If the woman chooses not to abort or
That's a reasonable implementation of the idea.
|
822.250 | | SMURF::BINDER | Ut aperies opera | Thu Sep 03 1992 13:32 | 9 |
| Re: .249
A reasonable implementation will not, unfortunately, have much effect
on a court. Judges tend to decide that the contents of any such
agreement, however well written and protected and witnessed, are null
and void where the welfare of a child is at stake and the woman appears
not to be able to follow through with total support.
-dick
|
822.251 | | SNBEAM::ZARLENGA | Michael Zarlenga, Alpha P/PEG | Thu Sep 03 1992 13:38 | 21 |
|
re:.250
That's another bridge that needs to be crossed. All in due time ...
.248>re .247, Mike, for some people adoption is wrong. It's not wrong for
.248> other people, if that's their choice, but there are people who could
.248> never give their own child up for adoption, so it should never just be
.248> assumed that adoption is an option for every woman.
For some men, abortion is also wrong, yet the woman can abort regard-
less. Have you considered the case of a man who wants the child?
Lorna, what you're citing as potential problems, for women, with my
proposal are existing problems, for men, with the current situation.
.248> As far as the feminist agenda goes, I have no idea what the feminist
.248> agenda is on the issue we're discussing.
Isn't equality for men and women one of the _fundamental_ maxims of
feminism?
|
822.252 | its already been said | EARRTH::MACKINNON | | Thu Sep 03 1992 13:50 | 29 |
| re .247
Mike,
Adoption is a legal means of BOTH parents absolving themselves
of the responsibility once a child has been brought into this world.
I think that adoption is an option for some but not all people.
>Isn't equity the primary goal of the feminist movement?
Not that I'm aware of. In the case of pregnancy, there is
not fair equity as only the women is pregnant. Biology can
not change this. Again, until such time that both men and
women are able to become pregnant, this will not be an equitable
situation. Nature dictates that. As for equity in other situations,
I believe that if both male and female are doing the same thing
then both should have equal weight. If all qualifications are
the same, why isnt the pay the same? For what its worth, I don't
beleive that women should automatically be granted as custodial
parent just due to their sex. I know of many a man who would be
in a far greater situation to raise his children. It is the judges
that deal the cards with respect to this. Change their attitudes.
We've given answers to the "equity after pregnancy question".
It doesnt exist. It only will when both sexes are able to
become pregnant. And why does the feminist movement have to
come into play here. This is an issue between the male and
female involved in the pregnancy.
|
822.253 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | the dangerous type | Thu Sep 03 1992 14:35 | 6 |
| > A woman who is owned by anyone or anything is a slave...
etc. I notice many, many references to women forced to do things they
don't wanna do being called "slaves," but curiously enough (or not) you
refer to men doing things they don't wanna do as "taking responsibility."
Interesting dichotomy, no?
|
822.254 | | DELNI::STHILAIRE | makes ya stop & wonder why | Thu Sep 03 1992 14:38 | 7 |
| re .253, the situations are not the same. A woman who is forced to
help support a child she didn't want, would also be "taking
responsibility." A man who was forced to have a vasectomy against his
wishes would be a slave.
Lorna
|
822.255 | GOOD GRIEF!!!! | FORTSC::WILDE | why am I not yet a dragon? | Thu Sep 03 1992 14:43 | 51 |
|
>Huh? If all these women are being the 'responsible' ones, and are using birth
>control, WHY are there some many unwanted pregnancies? I cannot believe there
>are THAT many failures of birth control methods.
>Perhaps the EXACT same message should be sent to women as well. If they are
>not protected then THEY should pay, and pay, and pay.... Perhaps this is a
>message that would reach young women out there and convince THEM to prevent
>pregnancies? In takes two genders; why shouldn't BOTH take the responsibility.
as has been said, repeatedly, BOTH SHOULD. In reality, as I've already
explained exhaustively, some women do not take adequate measures - in most
of these cases, because it would make them feel like they are "planning" to
have sex - and that would make them "bad". No, this ISN'T a good thing...
nobody here is saying it IS..but, it IS reality - we have a dramatic need
for no-nonsense sex education in this country - but, what little we've had
in the past has been solely aimed at women to prevent pregnancy - that is
the REAL problem - women are told that they are BAD if they plan to have
sex (read: take precautions against pregnancy) AND they are help solely
responsible for birth control (what do you mean you aren't on the pill?)...
don't you see the mixed message here? IF you want to know why so many
unplanned pregnancies happen....this is where you look. YES, YES, YES,
WOMEN SHOULD PROTECT THEMSELVES - REPEAT THIS TEN TIMES SO YOU WILL HEAR
IT....NOBODY THINKS THEY SHOULDN'T - BUT, IF YOU ARE INTERESTED IN STAYING
OUT OF THE STATE OF FATHERHOOD, YOU'D BETTER PROTECT YOURSELF. YOU HAVE NO
WAY OF CONTROLLING THE WOMAN'S BODY. PERIOD. SO, CONTROL YOUR OWN
CONTRIBUTION TO PREGNANCY IF YOU DON'T WANT TO BE A DADDY.
>And before you ask "Who is saying it is only the man", I will answer with 'you'.
>In my opinion, you are laying the blame for unwanted pregnancies solely on the
>male and that blame comes across (to me) in many of the notes you have entered
>here. If a woman does not want to get pregnant then SHE should take appropriate
>action on her part (from using BC to telling the man to get lost). In the same
>vein, the man should take appropriate action for BC if he does not want to deal
>with the results of unwanted pregnancies. But it is BOTH that need to; not just
>men as many of the writings here suggest.
Fer Pete's sake...the original note offered a premise - how do you prevent
becoming a father - I have been addressing THAT premise. The original note
put the man and woman in conflict over the issue of pregnancy - I've addressed
how THE MAN CAN PROTECT HIMSELF. If a woman doesn't want to get pregnant,
AND SHE HAS A HEALTHY ATTITUDE ABOUT HER SEXUALITY, THEN SHE WILL AVOID
PREGNANCY - BELIEVE ME. She is the one who carries the baby to term, or
she is the one who has to have a abortion...neither option is any fun.
Telling men to take precautions does NOT mean that I am telling women
they don't have to take precautions - that is a ridiculous premise...it
means that MEN SHOULD PROTECT THEIR OWN INTERESTS REGARDLESS OF WHAT THE
WOMAN DOES - THEN HE KNOWS HE IS PROTECTED!!!!!!!!!
|
822.256 | oh, forced adoption isn't slavery??? | FORTSC::WILDE | why am I not yet a dragon? | Thu Sep 03 1992 15:02 | 31 |
|
>.240> Re .239: The "equivalent" option for the man would be (presumably
>.240> through a pre-intercourse agreement of some kind) to state that if a
>.240> pregnancy should result, he has no interest in its outcome, and will
>.240> pay half the cost of an abortion. If the woman chooses not to abort or
> That's a reasonable implementation of the idea.
SURE...but, it may very well NOT be a good option for the child. Once
the pregnancy occurs, the options are narrowed to: woman gets abortion,
woman doesn't get abortion and spends the next 9 months pregnant, suffers
through hours of hideous pain delivering live child...and then she either
keeps the child and tries to raise the child alone or she puts the child
up for adoption. Now, perhaps YOU think that putting the child up for
adoption should be forced on the woman - again, making her a slave to
the mans whims - but, nature has developed some strong compulsions to
make sure the mother is willing to invest the time and energy to
raise a child. it is the bonding that takes place between mother
and child - and it makes the idea of permanent separation
from a child unbearable to most women - that is why there are so few
healthy babies available for adoption in this country and so many
families waiting for years to adopt. It is no more acceptable that
a man would force a woman to put a child up for adoption than it is
to force an abortion - both these decisions are painful, life-changing,
irrevolkable - and you cannot FORCE them on someone.
You want to have the final say when a woman gets pregnant - and yet men
don't go through the abortion or the pregnancy, nor do they create the
milk to feed the newborn - it is an experience you cannot understand...
or you would not be tossing these solutions around.
|
822.257 | | IAMOK::KELLY | | Thu Sep 03 1992 15:37 | 23 |
| who said anything about forced adoption? I don't see any men
asking to force a woman to do anything. The big issue, IMO,
is that because a woman is the one to bear the consequences of
an abortion or full term pregnancy, the choice is hers and doesn't
need to consult consider her partners feelings. she can choose to
eliminate the pregnancy, thereby severing further
ties/responsibilities. I only see men asking to be given the same
choice-to walk away from an unwanted child should a woman's choice
(decision made on her own)be to carry and keep said child...that may
seem cold-hearted to some, but then there are others who consider the
choice to terminate to be just as cold hearted. Regardless,, the end
result is the same-if the woman doesn't want the responsibility of a
child for 18+ years, she can terminate. Men don't have the same
choice. Obviously, my opinion is that they be given the same option.
And even though there are those here saying both people should takke
precautions to avoid pregnancy, my impression in reading all these
notes is that there is still more emphasis put toward educating men
than there are women. The comments about women being raised not to
be prepared to have sex seem to be to be a convenient way of excusing
a woman who is irresponsible about birth control and it's ok for her,
but not for him. Perhaps this isn't the intended message, but it's
the message I am recieving.
|
822.258 | you'll never truly understand this one | FORTSC::WILDE | why am I not yet a dragon? | Thu Sep 03 1992 15:40 | 40 |
| you guys really don't understand...I finally have accepted the fact that
you don't.
Pregnancy is much more REAL to the woman in some ways because it happens
to her body - and that means that men and woman don't have the same view
of the process - perhaps we simply cannot have the same view.
given the premise of the base note, then the answer to what can be done
once the woman is pregnant is: try and understand that SHE has to
make a life-changing decision - no matter what she does, she will lose
a great deal...and, perhaps gain as well - motherhood can be quite
wonderful if it is a desired state - but, she has to live with the
decision in an intimate manner that you will not understand.
This isn't an issue of money - if it was, the answer would be easy. It
is much deeper and more complex than that...and the woman has to face
the decisions alone if the man does not support her. You may be right,
the child might be better off not being born if both parents aren't willing
to care for him/her...but, the woman may not be able to turn off her bond
to the fetus enough to abort. And, once the child is born, the pain of
turning the child over for adoption can be devastating. It can ruin lives
to be forced into such answers at a time like this. That is certainly
not a fair price to pay for an unwanted pregnancy.
You're right...once pregnancy occurs, men don't have equal say on what
happens next. And, once a child is born, they can be forced into
paying child support for the child. Neither situation may be fair..but,
there aren't any more fair options available that would not unfairly
burden the woman or the child. I don't know many women who CAN support
their children who then go after the biological father on a whim - it
is a painful, humiliating process guarenteed to damage one's self-esteem.
So, if it will help any, you can be sure that she HAD to go after the
child support if you end up in court.....and you can be sure it isn't
fun. NOBODY WINS WHEN THE PREGNANCY ISN'T PLANNED BY BOTH PARTIES
INVOLVED.
So, are there better answers - yes...as said, don't let it happen in the
first place...or figure out how to make men pregnant instead of women
and let them face the real, PHYSICAL, toll the process demands of women..
maybe then we would all communicate better on this subject.
|
822.259 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | Let us prey | Thu Sep 03 1992 15:46 | 7 |
| Of course, of course, because we don't agree with what you say, _we_ don't
understand. It couldn't POSSIBLY be that you have a differing but equally
valid opinion. It's that you disagree and have a self-described superior
position. Right.
Maybe men SHOULD get paid more than women for the same work; at least women
won't be forced to pay for kids SOMEBODY ELSE wants...
|
822.260 | We'd disagree about who just ain't getting it | CSC32::HADDOCK | Don't Tell My Achy-Breaky Back | Thu Sep 03 1992 15:51 | 12 |
|
re .258
>you guys really don't understand...I finally have accepted the fact that
>you don't.
Actually I think the real problem ( to some here anyway ) is that
we DO understand what is REALLY happening and we are not buying
into the b.s. any more.
fred();
|
822.261 | strange messages coming in | FORTSC::WILDE | why am I not yet a dragon? | Thu Sep 03 1992 15:53 | 46 |
| > ties/responsibilities. I only see men asking to be given the same
> choice-to walk away from an unwanted child should a woman's choice
> (decision made on her own)be to carry and keep said child...that may
> seem cold-hearted to some, but then there are others who consider the
> choice to terminate to be just as cold hearted. Regardless,, the end
> result is the same-if the woman doesn't want the responsibility of a
> child for 18+ years, she can terminate. Men don't have the same
> choice. Obviously, my opinion is that they be given the same option.
when men walk away, innocent children pay the price...they do without
adequate shelter, food, clothing education...are you suggesting this
is fair?
> And even though there are those here saying both people should takke
> precautions to avoid pregnancy, my impression in reading all these
> notes is that there is still more emphasis put toward educating men
> than there are women. The comments about women being raised not to
> be prepared to have sex seem to be to be a convenient way of excusing
> a woman who is irresponsible about birth control and it's ok for her,
> but not for him. Perhaps this isn't the intended message, but it's
> the message I am recieving.
as this is MENNOTES - or have I segued into another dimension? - we are
addressing this issue PRIMARILY from the man's viewpoint - you seem
quite unhappy that men are being warned to protect themselves...keep up
that attitude and you, too, can become a daddy. The idea that women
are immune to the the social pressures that have have so seriously
screwed up the male viewpoint in this society interest me...are we
supposed to be somehow teflon-coated while boys are the only folks
who suffer because of unrealistic messages from the society around them?
Men are, by and large, unable to communicate their emotions, they are
unable to admit they have fears or feel love...they have problems
admiting that they aren't always "hot" for sex - all because of the
messages coming at them all the time about what they are supposed to
BE...woman are given different, but just as devastating messages -
and they can leave women as seriously screwed up as men get screwed
up. If you aren't willing to admit that, you risk not recognizing
the symptoms when you see them - and that, too, can harm your
relationships with women - or make you a daddy, depending on where
you stand when it hits the fan.
You are receiving a message that is NOT being transmitted...so, sit in your
cubical and be in a snit about it...fine by me...it solves nothing,
but it may make you feel a hell of alot better...I know I enjoy my
snits quite a bit... 8^}
|
822.262 | | VALKYR::RUST | | Thu Sep 03 1992 16:08 | 18 |
| Re .249: It may be a reasonable implementation, but as I tried to
point out in the rest of my note - and as others have commented on as
well - it's probably not a practical one. Furthermore, if and when a
child has been brought into the world and its parent(s) cannot support
it, who does? At present, government agencies at various levels -
meaning, of course, everyone who pays taxes. If my loosely-equivalent
option of a buy-out contract re child-support were to be implemented,
and the remaining parent opted to keep and raise the child but then
turned out to be unable to support it, we have the choice of having the
whole society share in paying for the child, or of placing fallback
responsibility on the other parent - contract or no contract...
If it were put to a public vote, "Shall we the taxpayers pay for these
children's support, or shall we attach the incomes of the people who
were responsible for creating these children," which way do you think
the vote would go?
-b
|
822.263 | | SOLVIT::SOULE | Pursuing Synergy... | Thu Sep 03 1992 16:11 | 11 |
| .258> you guys really don't understand...I finally have accepted the fact that
.258> you don't.
Dian,
This is one guy who DOES understand! I want you to know that I think
you have done an excellent job as champion of this cause. There is
nothing that I could add that has not already been said except to say
thanks for saying the things that needed to be said...
Regards, Don
|
822.264 | we are in violent agreement, guys.... | FORTSC::WILDE | why am I not yet a dragon? | Thu Sep 03 1992 16:36 | 4 |
| well, I try....I have no argument with the men who think it is unfair...
it sure is. I am not saying the situation is perfect...it sure isn't.
But, as a taxpayer, I ain't voting to pay INSTEAD of a biological father...
after all, I didn't get a vote on who he had sex with.
|
822.265 | check your assumptions | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | Let us prey | Thu Sep 03 1992 16:37 | 7 |
| >as this is MENNOTES - or have I segued into another dimension? - we are
>addressing this issue PRIMARILY from the man's viewpoint - you seem
>quite unhappy that men are being warned to protect themselves...keep up
>that attitude and you, too, can become a daddy.
Actually, I imagine that IAMOK::KELLY would find it far easier to become
a mommy...
|
822.266 | | PCCAD::DINGELDEIN | PHOENIX | Thu Sep 03 1992 16:38 | 35 |
| I go to an outing for the afternoon and all hell breaks loose!
re: 262
This is the "public perception" that is creating tremendous hardship
for Non-Custodial Parents. The men "get woman pregnant" and "Dead-Beat
Dads are gonna pay"! BIGTIME!!!
I watched the public hearings on C-SPAN a while back about the "CHILD
SUPPORT ASSURANCE ACT". One of the senators asked a group of three
woman who were "paternity specialists" about their statistics that
showed a virtual explosion in out-of-wedlock births. The senators
simply wanted to know why this was occurring. Every one of the panel
members just shrugged their shoulders and smiled saying "We don't have
any answers for you about why". They didn't even want to speculate.
Another interesting piece of info showed that the vast majority of men
who had paternity cases filed against them signed all the legal
paperwork voluntarily. The senators were "surprised" for some reason.
I'm sharing this with you to give a glimpse of the tone of this issue
in the federal arena.
I firmly believe that if some "fair and equitable" national laws
regarding this issue could be implemented everyone would be better of.
Especially the kids. Adversarial attitudes could be transformed into
co-operative sharing.
Someone made the "bullseye" observation that a woman has two chances to
avoid the problems or "blessings" of an accidental conception. A man
only has one. In some eyes "Womb territoriality reigns supreme". The
pre-sex agreement is the only way to manage the unfair risk to the man
but the matrimonial/paternity statutes would have to be reformed and as
long as "taxpayers" are deemed responsible for the failure of the
womans abilty to provide, the biological dad will be the "deep pockets"
pursued by the system.
|
822.267 | apologies for gender mixup | FORTSC::WILDE | why am I not yet a dragon? | Thu Sep 03 1992 16:40 | 8 |
|
> Actually, I imagine that IAMOK::KELLY would find it far easier to become
>a mommy...
if true, I stand corrected....I assumed the protest was from someone more
directly stung...if not, then apologies are in order. These noters
handles don't come in pink and blue so it was an honest mistake. The gist
of the message stands...
|
822.268 | | GORE::CONLON | | Thu Sep 03 1992 17:16 | 86 |
| RE: .242
> Intellectually I understand the arguments about men "protecting"
> their sperm etc., but it still says to me that the claim is women
> don't need to be held to the same standard of self-preservation in
> this matter and that irritates me,...
OF COURSE women are asked (and expected to) exercise the same amount
of caution (in preventing pregnancies) that men are being asked to do.
As it stands right now, the vast, vast majority of birth control taking
place is being done BY WOMEN. Recent surveys have shown that most men
don't even ASK if birth control is being used (much less initiate birth
control themselves.) It's this irresponsible attitude (the "Hey, I
only want to worry about getting laid and not what might happen later")
that is the problem being highlighted here (by some of us.)
> ...the inherant implication that a
> man is irresponsible if he doesn't use a condom or keep looking over
> his partner's shoulder to make sure she's not lying to him or misusing
> her form of bc.
Why is it so tough for men to be responsible for their own methods of
birth control when so many of them know DAMN WELL that the risks they
are taking (by not controlling and/or protecting their sperm) could
end up ruining their lives for the next 18-21 years??? Men aren't
stupid. Men can say, "Gee, I'm in danger here. I guess I should take
some precaution" instead of, "Gee, I really want to get laid and condoms
don't feel natural, so I think I'll throw caution to the wind, then
whine a whole lot if anyone expects me to pay for this later."
> When is the woman responsible?
Unless the woman travels backward in time, she is responsible (no
matter what the guy decides to do.)
The woman *always* bears the responsibility for dealing with abortion,
adoption or parenting (unless she miscarries before any of these things
occur.) In any case, it's the woman's life AND HEALTH that are at risk
here (as well as her financial situation for the next 18-21 years.)
> And while probably helpful, to me it implies that a woman is unable
> (too stupid) to take care of her own needs for protection when the
> man is urged to use the condom or help check her IUD,sponge, pills, etc.
You inferred incorrectly. Many times, I've mentioned that BOTH PEOPLE
need to take care of birth control (and I've stated repeatedly that far
less accidental pregnancies would result if BOTH PEOPLE used their own
form of birth control.)
Your problem (most likely) is that you're used to thinking of birth
control as a "one person" operation. If she does it, then he's off
the hook. If he does it, then [thanks to cultural sexism] she must
be too stupid to do it.
I've been saying for years that BOTH PEOPLE should do it. BOTH PEOPLE
(MEN AND WOMEN.) If one method fails, the other backs it up (and both
people know that they are taking responsibility for their reproduction
THEMSELVES without leaving it up to someone else.)
> Where are the people urging women to make sure men wear the condom,,
> use it as part of your foreplay?
Men aren't stupid. They don't need to be nagged into protecting their
livelihoods for the next 18-21 years (nor do they need to be coddled
by women who turn men's protection into a fun game.) If men want to
be protected, they can be responsible for their OWN PROTECTION them-
selves (while women are responsible for THEIR protection.) Simple!
> And the comments about men being too selfish to use one
> due to inhibiting pleasure, I know lots of women who feel the same
> way about condom use, so men aren't the only selfish ones when it comes
> to sex.
Men have a way to protect themselves against paying support for 18-21
years. It may not be as "fun" as having sex without a condom, but it's
a lot less risky. If they take the risks and whine about paying the
consequences, I have to ask, "Is 'natural sex' worth the price you'll
be paying for the next 18-21 years?" If not, then it was a dumb choice.
> Why do men need to control their sperm, but women don't need to control
> their eggs?
No one said women don't need to control their eggs. (Hopefully, I
don't have to repeat it to you again that I've been talking about
BOTH PERSONS taking precautions, not just one of the two people who
are having sex together.)
|
822.269 | | GORE::CONLON | | Thu Sep 03 1992 17:27 | 41 |
| RE: .246 Joe Melvin
> Huh? If all these women are being the 'responsible' ones, and are
> using birth control, WHY are there some many unwanted pregnancies?
> I cannot believe there are THAT many failures of birth control methods.
NO birth control methods are 100% effective. However, if both parties
used their own methods, the odds of both failing (simultaneously) are
very low. It's the best possible way to prevent pregnancy (except for
abstinence.)
> Perhaps the EXACT same message should be sent to women as well. If
> they are not protected then THEY should pay, and pay, and pay....
Women *do* pay and pay and pay for accidental pregnancies!!!!! They
face surgery on their sexual organs, or life-threatening procedures
(after nine months of having their health severely affected) and if
they raise the child alone, women face a good chance of living in
poverty.
> Perhaps this is a message that would reach young women out there and
> convince THEM to prevent pregnancies? In takes two genders; why
> shouldn't BOTH take the responsibility.
How many times does it need to be repeated that folks here are talking
about BOTH PERSONS using birth control????? Why is it that some men
respond to requests to be responsible (in this area of their lives)
with assumptions that they're being asked to be the ONLY ones who use
birth control? BOTH PERSONS SHOULD USE IT. BOTH PERSONS. BOTH!
> And before you ask "Who is saying it is only the man", I will answer
> with 'you'.
And you'll be wrong.
> But it is BOTH that need to; not just men as many of the writings here
> suggest.
I'm glad you agree that BOTH PERSONS need to use birth control. Most
men still don't think it's their responsibility to do so (but don't
want to be burdened with the consequences of this irresponsibility.)
|
822.270 | Real equality would involve risking father's very lives. | GORE::CONLON | | Thu Sep 03 1992 17:33 | 19 |
| RE: .251 Mike Z.
> Isn't equality for men and women one of the _fundamental_ maxims of
> feminism?
In the case of pregnancy, it would be most "equal" if men's lives and
physical health were as much at risk as women's (after fertalizing a
woman's eggs.) We'd see real equality if we could toss a coin and
decide who carries the fetus (and if the man "wins" the toss, his body
is cut open to plant the growing embryo to be carried until he goes
through the excrutiating pain of delivering the child 7-9 months later.)
Unfortunately, it's not possible to put a man's life and health at
risk this way (nor to operate on his sexual organs as part of this
specific pregnancy.)
Men (and women) risk a heavy financial burden, though (which is a lot
closer to "equality" than having women risk their lives *and* their
futures while men risk absolutely nothing at all.)
|
822.271 | | HDLITE::ZARLENGA | Michael Zarlenga, Alpha P/PEG | Thu Sep 03 1992 20:09 | 8 |
| .252 Again, until such time that both men and
.252> women are able to become pregnant, this will not be an equitable
.252> situation. Nature dictates that.
Nature does no such thing, YOU dictate that the inequality will remain.
Equality is the goal only if you don't have to give up any of your own
perks, eh?
|
822.272 | | HDLITE::ZARLENGA | Michael Zarlenga, Alpha P/PEG | Thu Sep 03 1992 20:17 | 7 |
| .256>milk to feed the newborn - it is an experience you cannot understand...
There we have it ... I cannot understand it because I'm a man.
The only logical conclusion of this flawed premise is that you cannot
possibly understand _my_ side, because you're a women. I don't actually
believe that cop out, by the way.
|
822.273 | | HDLITE::ZARLENGA | Michael Zarlenga, Alpha P/PEG | Thu Sep 03 1992 20:21 | 4 |
| .264>well, I try....I have no argument with the men who think it is unfair...
.264>it sure is. I am not saying the situation is perfect...it sure isn't.
"Hey, it's unfair, sure, but that's your tough luck."
|
822.275 | | GORE::CONLON | | Thu Sep 03 1992 20:41 | 29 |
| RE: .271 Mike Z.
.252> Again, until such time that both men and
.252> women are able to become pregnant, this will not be an equitable
.252> situation. Nature dictates that.
> Nature does no such thing, YOU dictate that the inequality will remain.
Bunk. Nature dictates that women's lives and health are at stake in
pregnancy (not men's.) This is an inequality that can't be fixed
until we have the option of cutting men's bodies open to plant a
growing fetus (for example.) Until then, the danger, the pain and
the health risks are carried by women alone.
Men get the easy part. They don't have to risk their lives or their
health. They only have to (sometimes) worry that they may have to
help support a child they didn't want (if they didn't bother to use
their own method of birth control and the women's method failed or
she wasn't using one.)
> Equality is the goal only if you don't have to give up any of your own
> perks, eh?
It doesn't constitute "equality" to force women to bear 100% of
the burden of unplanned pregnancy while men bear 0.0%.
Of course, we already know that equality isn't the goal of those who
already have many societal perks/advantages (and are fighting like
hell to keep from losing them.)
|
822.276 | | GORE::CONLON | | Thu Sep 03 1992 20:45 | 14 |
| RE: .273 Mike Z.
.264>well, I try....I have no argument with the men who think it is unfair...
.264>it sure is. I am not saying the situation is perfect...it sure isn't.
> "Hey, it's unfair, sure, but that's your tough luck."
Nope. It's more like (from many men in our society):
"Hey, if women and men can't each bear 50.0000000000000% of the
responsibility, then women should be stuck with 100% of it and
men should have 0.0% for things to be EQUAL."
Bunk.
|
822.277 | | GORE::CONLON | | Thu Sep 03 1992 20:57 | 20 |
| The men in this conference who are already Dads (with kids in the
same house) should know that a weekly or monthly sum of money is
almost nothing compared to what it really takes to raise a child.
Doctah, you're a Dad. Imagine if someone sent you a sum of money
to help pay for your youngest daughter's expenses. Would this be
"the ultimate responsibility" of raising her?
Raising a child has so much more to it than a few (or even a lot)
of bucks that child support for 18 years can't compare (by a long
shot) in equal numbers with the work it takes to raise and nurture
a child every day of his/her life for those 18 years.
Changing the law to give women 100% of the responsibility while men
have 0% of the responsibility is *not* equality. (It's just the
same old shaft women have gotten throughout recorded history, with
the exception that women in the 20th century are more likely to be
awarded custody.) Prior to this century, men were always, always,
always given custody in divorce cases (because they had ALL the
money, not just most of it.)
|
822.279 | selective equality abounds in this note | HDLITE::ZARLENGA | Michael Zarlenga, Alpha P/PEG | Thu Sep 03 1992 23:58 | 12 |
| .275> Nature dictates that women's lives and health are at stake in
.275> pregnancy (not men's.)
Another tangent ...
Listen, a pregnant woman has two choices : 1 abort, 2 carry to term.
The man has two choices also : 1 watch the woman abort, 2 watch the
woman carry to term and then spend the next 18 years of his life paying
child support.
That hardly seems like equality ...
|
822.280 | | IAMOK::KELLY | | Fri Sep 04 1992 09:26 | 16 |
| re: 216
Dian,
boy, you really haven't been reading my notes. I am a woman and have
stated so before, so, I'm not worried about my attitude perhaps causing
me to become a daddy.
When it comes to your comment on "you guys really don't understand"
I understand what you are saying, I just don't happen to agree. I
also don't agree that every child that results from an unwanted
pregnancy is going to result in the child living in abject poverty.
I assure you, I am not in a snit, but if you'd like to dismiss my
disagreement as such, that is your perogative. Just wanted to set
the record straight. I DISAGREE WITH YOU. It's really that simple.
Christine ( a woman )
|
822.281 | Unreality abounds in this note. | SMURF::BINDER | Ut aperies opera | Fri Sep 04 1992 09:47 | 9 |
| Re: .279
Spending the next 18 years paying child support is not worse than, or
even equal to, spending the next 18 years taking care of the child
through thick and thin, sick and healty, flush and broke, coo and
curse, while also trying to manage a job of one's own and (possibly)
other children as well. Get a clue, Mike.
-dick
|
822.282 | | AIMHI::RAUH | I survived the Cruel Spa | Fri Sep 04 1992 09:59 | 25 |
| <<< Note 822.258 by FORTSC::WILDE "why am I not yet a dragon?" >>>
-< you'll never truly understand this one >-
you guys really don't understand...I finally have accepted the fact
that
you don't.
--------------------------------------------------------------------
Yes, we are a bunch of black-heart-less jackals. Whose primary concern
is our lustful loins that we are guided by. Your preaching to the wrong
bunch of men. Many of us do give a dam, and
thats why we are writing here. You don't think that many of us have a
soul, a conscience. We are guided by our loins and not our hearts and
heads. Perhaps this is the real reason that the NOW org is not making
this headway that you have been damning us with.
You think that many of us would purposely turn our backs towards our
own children? You think that we just go around beating women and
children because we have external genitaila? Over taxed with male
testerone? ........
Perhaps you should attend a Fathers United meeting sometime. You just
might get an ear and eye full of what goes on this side of the fence.
|
822.284 | | PCCAD::DINGELDEIN | PHOENIX | Fri Sep 04 1992 10:29 | 35 |
| Everyone agrees that no matter how you slice it bringing a child into
the world is a monumental decision requiring unwavering committment.
The best way to manage the situation is prevention...but
As has been stated many times, it's not a perfect world. Some people
are irresponsible and deceptive. Some guys (and gals I might add)
only want to get laid without thinking about the potential
ramifications of their actions. Each individuals motives and goals are
unique to the person. The "potential result" is the same.
My view is that due to a lack of equality after the fetus has developed
to a point where abortion is "not an option" something has to be done
from the time of conception till the end of the first trimester (in
todays definition of acceptable termination). What this proposed action
is can take many forms but the action has to have enough power to
supercede "changing your mind" or "the interests of the state". In
present form child support obligation for a NCP can devestate a person
financially and is comparable to "indentured servitude" but I'll stick
to the present topic.
There are many woman who have to have kids in their lives to feel they
have fulfilled their "meaning and identity" and will "go it alone" if
that's what it takes. But if they fail to provide...guess who gets to
do it for her! The decision cannot be made with impunity to the impact
on the man involved. There has to be a legal forum that creates
conciosness of "willing or unwilling". This is the crux of the
inequality. Even if the man is not willing to voluntarily submit to
parenthood the woman can impose it upon him and the system will provide
for the child regardless of how the guy "feels about it".
Without some form of "decision forum" and "escape clause" for the man
the woman can do what she wants. Any ideas-without the "you shouldn't
have" or "slavery arguments. My premise stands, without two committed
parents you are creating a mess that lasts a lifetime. Somebody is
going be treated unfairly, man and/or woman and/or child.
T
|
822.285 | | RUSURE::MELVIN | Ten Zero, Eleven Zero Zero by Zero 2 | Fri Sep 04 1992 11:34 | 37 |
| > NO birth control methods are 100% effective. However, if both parties
> used their own methods, the odds of both failing (simultaneously) are
> very low. It's the best possible way to prevent pregnancy (except for
> abstinence.)
I am aware of this. My claim has always been BOTH parties should use their
own methods. We seem to agree.
> Women *do* pay and pay and pay for accidental pregnancies!!!!! They
> face surgery on their sexual organs, or life-threatening procedures
> (after nine months of having their health severely affected) and if
> they raise the child alone, women face a good chance of living in
> poverty.
But if they raise the child with the father paying and paying and paying, the
one more likely to be living in poverty is the father.
> How many times does it need to be repeated that folks here are talking
> about BOTH PERSONS using birth control?????
How many times does it have to be said that some folks here are NOT talking
about BOTH persons, but only the man. Check out the notes here and you will
see a numbe rof strings that sya 'men should do this' or 'men are responsible'
those same notes do not mention women in the same way (also, only look at
those notes prior to the one of mine you are replying to). At that point, the
focus was only on men.
> And you'll be wrong.
In your opinion?
> I'm glad you agree that BOTH PERSONS need to use birth control. Most
> men still don't think it's their responsibility to do so (but don't
> want to be burdened with the consequences of this irresponsibility.)
And there are irresponsible women that do not use birth control as well.
|
822.286 | | RUSURE::MELVIN | Ten Zero, Eleven Zero Zero by Zero 2 | Fri Sep 04 1992 11:40 | 23 |
| > Men get the easy part. They don't have to risk their lives or their
> health. They only have to (sometimes) worry that they may have to
> help support a child they didn't want (if they didn't bother to use
> their own method of birth control and the women's method failed or
> she wasn't using one.)
Rather interesting the way you put this. What if the MAN's birth control has
failed? The way you paint this picture, it makes the man look totally
irresponsible.
> It doesn't constitute "equality" to force women to bear 100% of
> the burden of unplanned pregnancy while men bear 0.0%.
Sorry, but women do NOT bear 100% of the burden of pregnancy. Perhaps the
physical birth itself, but all those incidentals around it sometimes involve
the father.
> Of course, we already know that equality isn't the goal of those who
> already have many societal perks/advantages (and are fighting like
> hell to keep from losing them.)
Yeh.. Right....
|
822.287 | | RUSURE::MELVIN | Ten Zero, Eleven Zero Zero by Zero 2 | Fri Sep 04 1992 11:43 | 8 |
| >
> I agree wholeheartedly with you. Some financial support does not come
> close to the emotional, mental, spiritual, physical support that every
> child and individual needs.
Except that some men are NOT allowed visitations right or ANY say in the
upbringing. That is FORCED on them, wouldn't you agree?
|
822.288 | | DELNI::STHILAIRE | makes ya stop & wonder why | Fri Sep 04 1992 11:57 | 4 |
| Well, it seems to me that men just want their own way.
Lorna
|
822.289 | | AIMHI::RAUH | I survived the Cruel Spa | Fri Sep 04 1992 12:03 | 19 |
| > Except that some men are NOT allowed visitations right or ANY say in the
> upbringing. That is FORCED on them, wouldn't you agree?
To me this seems more like slavery. Forced slavery of the system, of
preconcieved notions and reputations. We help bring children into this
world, and we are not allowed to see them? To foster them, to hold them
and tell them how much we love and miss them. Want to feel their little
arms around my neck. Listen to them sing and read a book to them. Or
have them fall alseep in my arms.
Yep, just a bunch of black-heart-less jackels. Whose primary concern is
loin driven. Yep.... We don't bare the birth of children, many of us
are there in the room with you. Holding your hands, telling you how
much fun its going to be to watch them grow. Then we are put out with
the trash and told to leave our homes, our children and our money.
Forced slavery? Forced to take that second job to pay maintence,
mortage, insurance. What time is there to spend with our children when
we are working so many jobs?
|
822.290 | | IAMOK::KELLY | | Fri Sep 04 1992 12:03 | 5 |
| Lorna,
I guess to some others here, it seems the opposite.
Christine
|
822.291 | | DELNI::STHILAIRE | makes ya stop & wonder why | Fri Sep 04 1992 12:14 | 20 |
| re .290, I'm sure it does. But, if I want my way, and a man wants his
way, and what we both want is opposite, I'll be damned if I can
understand why the man thinks I should give in to him and let him have
his way. It seems like this is one of the few areas where, due to
nature, men have not been able to have their way, and, since they are
so used to having their way, they just can't deal with it. Too damn
bad (is my opinion).
Men don't want to have to financially support children they have with
women they weren't married to or in love with. But, some women don't
want to abort children they accidentally conceive, and yet can't afford
to raise a child alone. This is a problem.
The best way to deal with it, as has been said repeatedly, is for both
to use birth control. However, should that birth control fail, then I
think the biological father is responsible for helping to raise that
child.
Lorna
|
822.292 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | Let us prey | Fri Sep 04 1992 12:28 | 15 |
| >But, if I want my way, and a man wants his
> way, and what we both want is opposite, I'll be damned if I can
> understand why the man thinks I should give in to him and let him have
> his way.
And there is no compelling reason why your way should be considered to
be more important than his way. What's the solution? You go your way and he
goes his. That way, nobody gets stuck with someone else's decision.
>But, some women don't
> want to abort children they accidentally conceive, and yet can't afford
> to raise a child alone. This is a problem.
This is THEIR problem.
|
822.294 | Clarify | CSC32::W_LINVILLE | sinning ain't no fun since she bought a gun | Fri Sep 04 1992 13:20 | 17 |
|
> The best way to deal with it, as has been said repeatedly, is for both
> to use birth control. However, should that birth control fail, then I
> think the biological father is responsible for helping to raise that
> child.
> Lorna
Do mean the father is responsible for paying for the child or do you
mean he will be allow full parental privileges ( decisions, see the
child anytime he wants, discipline, etc ). Somehow I think you are only
talking about money........
Wayne
|
822.296 | set flame on | FORTSC::WILDE | why am I not yet a dragon? | Fri Sep 04 1992 13:39 | 30 |
|
> Equality is the goal only if you don't have to give up any of your own
> perks, eh?
I hardly thing any woman will think it is a "perk" to end up pregnant and
be left to go through labor and have the baby ALONE, or to have a
painful abortion ALONE, or to live in poverty while trying to raise the
child ALONE...where are these "perks"?????
The woman bears the physical exhaustion, pain, and possible loss of life
(pregnancies go very wrong sometimes - women STILL die in childbirth or
before) in this situation - or she faces possible permanent sterility
or internal bleeding or peritonitis if something goes wrong with the
abortion - and sometimes things go wrong even with legal, safe abortions.
If they use the pill to prevent pregnancy, they get to have their hormones
yanked joyfully about every month of their reproductive life...or they can
live with the constant yeast infections and other niceties of the
insertable forms of birth control like the sponge/diaphragm....and, if
they get an IUD, they face possible infections of the uterus and inflamed
fallopian tubes - this will certainly make the victim sterile and has been
known to KILL some of the women who weren't luck. Not all women suffer
all, or any, of these afflictions, of course...but EVERY WOMAN IS AT RISK.
What do the men risk? Oh yes, their MONEY...
Woman are paying a pretty heavy damned price for the "perks" of having
sex with self-centered overgrown children who don't want to take
responsibility for birth control themselves and who certainly don't
want to support any child that can result.
Wow! What a concept. How did we get so lucky.
|
822.297 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | Let us prey | Fri Sep 04 1992 13:48 | 6 |
| reasonable shrill
^
|
Getting near the end of the scale, eh? :-)
|
822.298 | | PCCAD::DINGELDEIN | PHOENIX | Fri Sep 04 1992 13:52 | 9 |
| MS. WILDE
Woman have as many choices as men. Woman do not have to have sex with a
man! They don't have to use birth control! They don't HAVE to do
anything! This buisness about the trials and tribulations of pregnancy
is your attempt to distract, not discuss the premise of equal
responsibility=equal choice. Pregnancy and all its "evils" is a
temporary condition which the woman has complete control of. She can
demand terms to her potential partner or accomodate. That's HER choice.
|
822.299 | | HDLITE::ZARLENGA | Michael Zarlenga, Alpha P/PEG | Fri Sep 04 1992 13:53 | 3 |
| re:.288
Nah, we just want similar choices.
|
822.300 | apologies in mistake in gender - again | FORTSC::WILDE | why am I not yet a dragon? | Fri Sep 04 1992 13:53 | 38 |
|
> When it comes to your comment on "you guys really don't understand"
> I understand what you are saying, I just don't happen to agree. I
> also don't agree that every child that results from an unwanted
> pregnancy is going to result in the child living in abject poverty.
> I assure you, I am not in a snit, but if you'd like to dismiss my
> disagreement as such, that is your perogative. Just wanted to set
> the record straight. I DISAGREE WITH YOU. It's really that simple.
Christine ( a woman ),
I never said that every child born to a single mother was going to end
up in poverty - I know many who don't - however, when a man is taken
to court and asked to pay child support, the premise is that the child
support is needed for the child. If the woman doesn't choose to take
a man to court in order to get child support - then none of the men
here would have any problem at all - the man wouldn't pay, and the woman
would be able to pay all the price herself. If both want it that way,
AND can afford it that way, then the men in this conference would be
very happy - and I presume there would be no issue. It is only when the
child support is NEEDED that an issue comes up...my premise from the
start of this string as been to PREVENT the problem by BOTH players
being responsible for birth control - if you disagree with this premise,
it is your right - I was then chided that I wasn't dealing with the
question of what happens once a woman is pregnant...so, I dealt with
it. I said that the man should EXPECT to pay child support for any
child he fathers - please note, I said EXPECT - if he doesn't HAVE TO
because the woman doesn't NEED or WANT the money for the child. Fine.
However, I still believe that, should the money be needed, the man
responsible for the child should pay rather than the taxpayers paying
so HE can walk away scott-free. If you also disagree with THIS
premise, so be it.
re: not reading your notes - I read each note carefully, but I am not
perfect at tracking sign-on tags with signatures at the end of notes.
there are, after all, almost 300 hundred in this string. Again, I
apologize.
|
822.301 | | HDLITE::ZARLENGA | Michael Zarlenga, Alpha P/PEG | Fri Sep 04 1992 13:55 | 13 |
| .296>I hardly thing any woman will think it is a "perk" to end up pregnant and
.296>be left to go through labor and have the baby ALONE, or to have a
.296>painful abortion ALONE, or to live in poverty while trying to raise the
.296>child ALONE...where are these "perks"?????
Ok, if that's NOT a perk, then let's get rid of it...
From now on, all women must carry to term.
There, we removed those "painful abortions" from the list of terrible
things women must endure. Happy now?
Or maybe it WAS a perk, eh?
|
822.302 | so hostile? | FORTSC::WILDE | why am I not yet a dragon? | Fri Sep 04 1992 14:06 | 48 |
|
> Yes, we are a bunch of black-heart-less jackals. Whose primary concern
> is our lustful loins that we are guided by. Your preaching to the wrong
> bunch of men. Many of us do give a dam, and
> thats why we are writing here. You don't think that many of us have a
> soul, a conscience. We are guided by our loins and not our hearts and
> heads. Perhaps this is the real reason that the NOW org is not making
> this headway that you have been damning us with.
in the first place, where did I bring in NOW? also, I think that there
are many men who are willing and able and anxious to take responsiblity
for their children - and I am assuming they do - I know a lot of women
who are raising kids who have fathers who are concerned and loving parents
and who work with the women to make sure the kids concerns are FIRST.
That is what I call responsible parenting...I don't know if the men planned
to be fathers, but I know they are doing a hell of a good job. I never
said there weren't. My problem is with the men who will NOT participate
in birth control, and who then want to turn their back on the results.
THESE men obviously don't understand - and they were the ones writing the
notes so they were the ones who I was talking to - you, on the other hand,
are obviously a very paranoid person who assumes everyone is talking
about you - even when you know you don't fit the description. That is
unfortunate - there are lots of nice people in this world - men and women
who have no hostility towards you, no axe to grind, and who are willing
and able to be your friends - you should give them a chance before you
decide they are out to get you...and for Pete's sake, don't think all
the criticism is pointed at you - unless the shoe fits.
> You think that many of us would purposely turn our backs towards our
> own children? You think that we just go around beating women and
> children because we have external genitaila? Over taxed with male
> testerone? ........
I'm sorry, but the overblown prose on this one is just too much...I hadda
laugh....I honestly know many men who do not drag their knuckles on the
ground - I know they exist...hell, I know you can even dress them up
and take them out sometimes - if you don't make them wear a tie...
> Perhaps you should attend a Fathers United meeting sometime. You just
> might get an ear and eye full of what goes on this side of the fence.
I know several single fathers - and two men who are struggling to be
fathers in the face of hostile ex-wives - I know the side you are sitting
on. I also know that nobody wins with the hostility monitor set at
100% - for your own sake, and the sake of any children involved, try not
to hate - and I know it can be hard, but the kids need you to NOT HATE...
whatever happens.
|
822.303 | | SOLVIT::MSMITH | So, what does it all mean? | Fri Sep 04 1992 14:15 | 7 |
| re: .288
>Well, it seems to me that men just want their own way.
And women don't, I suppose.
Mike
|
822.305 | | DELNI::STHILAIRE | makes ya stop & wonder why | Fri Sep 04 1992 16:33 | 19 |
| re .292, I disagree. I think that once a man sticks his penis into a
woman, that if a child results it's just as much his problem as hers.
I think if a man's sperm creates a child, then he is responsible to
help raise it.
re .294, wrong again, Wayne! I think that if a man is willing to help
financially support a child that he should be granted visitation
rights. I am also against men being made to pay so much child support
that they're put in the poor house. (After all, I did live with a guy
for 2 1/2 yrs., who could never afford to take me anywhere because most
of his money went for child support for the 2 dumb kids he had with his
creepy ex-wife. He told me that if I ever got pregnant by accident,
that he would abandon me if I didn't have an abortion. I said, "Oh,
but that bitch's kids get to live and have all your money besides!
FTS!" - I think I would have had an abortion, but then *I* would have
abandoned him!)
Lorna
|
822.306 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | Let us prey | Fri Sep 04 1992 16:36 | 12 |
| >I think that once a man sticks his penis into a
> woman, that if a child results it's just as much his problem as hers.
Why do you think guys bolt?
>I think that if a man is willing to help
> financially support a child that he should be granted visitation
> rights.
How generous! I think that if a man is going to be expected to pay 1/2
the upkeep of a child (or more!), he should be entitled to joint physical
custody and equal say in the upbringing of the child.
|
822.307 | | DELNI::STHILAIRE | makes ya stop & wonder why | Fri Sep 04 1992 16:45 | 9 |
| re .306, why do I think guys bolt?
because they're heartless cads? :-)
I have nothing against joint physical custody and a say in how the kids
brought up, for the father. I just didn't think of it when I replied.
Lorna
|
822.308 | 1/2 support=Joint Custody | CSC32::HADDOCK | Don't Tell My Achy-Breaky Back | Fri Sep 04 1992 16:47 | 5 |
| re .306
MEGADITTOS
fred();
|
822.309 | | VALKYR::RUST | | Fri Sep 04 1992 17:01 | 19 |
| Waydaminit! You're saying that somebody can _buy_ custody and
visitation rights?
Seems to me there are two completely different things here - the
_responsibility_ for providing support for the child, theoretically
owed by both parents, and the _ability_ to be a parent. If one or both
of the biological parents aren't fit to take care of a child, should
they be allowed to do so just because they pay the bills?
I don't think so.
Now, that's not what the majority of cases are about, clearly. I, too,
have heard and read of cases where one parent is apparently willing to
take the other's money but refuses, without reason, to allow the other
access to the children. That's cruel to all concerned, and yet another
problem to be addressed. But paying the bills does not, and should not,
automatically allow someone to act as parent.
-b
|
822.310 | | GORE::CONLON | | Fri Sep 04 1992 17:11 | 35 |
| RE: .279 Mike Z.
> Listen, a pregnant woman has two choices : 1 abort, 2 carry to term.
In other words, she can either have surgery (on her sexual organs)
or she can go through a 9-month medical condition (risking death
and/or serious medical complications that can affect her health
permanently).
If things were equal, expectant fathers would face the same difficult
choices (and risks of his death or serious medical complications.)
Instead, the man merely "watches" someone else face the responsibility
for these choices and "watches" someone else take these life and death
health risks. (So far, the woman has 100% of the responsibility and
the man has 0.0%.)
> The man has two choices also : 1 watch the woman abort, 2 watch the
> woman carry to term and then spend the next 18 years of his life paying
> child support.
If the woman carries to term and keeps the child, the man is now
sharing SOME of the financial responsibility (but very little or
possibly NONE of the ultimate responsibilities involved with raising
a young life.) Even if he pays for 18 years, he's carrying a great
deal less than 50% of this portion of the responsibility (after
carrying 0.0% of the earlier responsibility.)
If a man is allowed to walk away "scott free," then he has a full
0.0% of the responsibility for pregnancy while the woman carries
the remaining 100% (except for the portion carried by the rest of
the taxpayers in our society, if she needs public assistance.)
> That hardly seems like equality ...
0.0% vs. 100% sure as hell ain't equality.
|
822.311 | | GORE::CONLON | | Fri Sep 04 1992 17:19 | 14 |
| RE: .285 Joe
> But if they raise the child with the father paying and paying and
> paying, the one more likely to be living in poverty is the father.
Take a look at the stats about poverty sometime. Single mothers and
their children are far, far, far more likely to end up in poverty
than the fathers of these children.
From the recent release of stats by the Census Bureau (1991):
40% of the poor were children.
Women were more likely to be poor than men (one woman in six lived
in poverty, compared to one man in eight.)
|
822.312 | Go Figure! | PCCAD::DINGELDEIN | PHOENIX | Fri Sep 04 1992 17:32 | 8 |
| RE 311
The census beureau stats are bogus numbers. They're based on tax
returns. If a man is making 30K a year and gives up 50% to a divorce
settlement he's only got 15K minus taxes to live on. On the other hand
the woman who is makink say 15k a year gets all her support money tax
free and doesn't have to claim it on her return. So much for trusting
government numbers to base an argument!
|
822.313 | | GORE::CONLON | | Fri Sep 04 1992 18:21 | 11 |
| RE: .312
> The census beureau stats are bogus numbers.
Do you honestly believe that 40% of the nation's poor are NOT
children? (Are they just folks living 'the good life' off money
from dear ole Dad?)
I suppose you could also say that poverty simply doesn't exist.
(Perhaps this is the next tactic Bush will try in his failing
re-election bid.)
|
822.314 | | RUSURE::MELVIN | Ten Zero, Eleven Zero Zero by Zero 2 | Fri Sep 04 1992 18:33 | 9 |
|
> access to the children. That's cruel to all concerned, and yet another
> problem to be addressed. But paying the bills does not, and should not,
> automatically allow someone to act as parent.
I always thought the reason that FINANCIAL support was required is because that
person IS the parent of the child (ie, contributed to the creation of the child)
Regardless of how much (or little) support is paid, that fact is, well... FACT.
That person IS the child's parent.
|
822.315 | | RUSURE::MELVIN | Ten Zero, Eleven Zero Zero by Zero 2 | Fri Sep 04 1992 18:36 | 9 |
| >
> If a man is allowed to walk away "scott free," then he has a full
> 0.0% of the responsibility for pregnancy while the woman carries
> the remaining 100% (except for the portion carried by the rest of
> the taxpayers in our society, if she needs public assistance.)
Or unless she puts the child in day care, or the care of grandparents, etc.
At which time this '100% responsibilty' you keep using erodes away quite fast.
|
822.316 | and more stats | FORTSC::WILDE | why am I not yet a dragon? | Fri Sep 04 1992 18:39 | 20 |
|
> RE 311
> The census beureau stats are bogus numbers. They're based on tax
> returns. If a man is making 30K a year and gives up 50% to a divorce
> settlement he's only got 15K minus taxes to live on. On the other hand
> the woman who is makink say 15k a year gets all her support money tax
> free and doesn't have to claim it on her return. So much for trusting
> government numbers to base an argument!
and another interesting stat from your government:
after divorce, the mans standard of living INCREASES 25+%...after divorce,
the womans standard of living DECREASES 50+%. These stats came from a
country-wide survey of such considerations as:
living expenses,
disposable income,
expenses vs income, !note - the women have the children
purchasing power
|
822.317 | | GORE::CONLON | | Fri Sep 04 1992 18:40 | 19 |
| RE: .315 Joe
>> If a man is allowed to walk away "scott free," then he has a full
>> 0.0% of the responsibility for pregnancy while the woman carries
>> the remaining 100% (except for the portion carried by the rest of
>> the taxpayers in our society, if she needs public assistance.)
> Or unless she puts the child in day care, or the care of grandparents,
> etc. At which time this '100% responsibilty' you keep using erodes away
> quite fast.
It doesn't come anywhere NEAR the 0.0% responsibility the man would
have if he were allowed to walk away "scott free" though.
Even if the man paid child support for 18 years, he still wouldn't
even reach 50% of the responsibility.
In any case, 0.0% and <something less than 100% but way, way, way
above 0.0%> are not "equal."
|
822.318 | | RUSURE::MELVIN | Ten Zero, Eleven Zero Zero by Zero 2 | Fri Sep 04 1992 18:44 | 24 |
| > Take a look at the stats about poverty sometime. Single mothers and
> their children are far, far, far more likely to end up in poverty
> than the fathers of these children.
So, WHEN is it that the stats say these people end up in poverty? Immediately
upon divorce? 5 years later? 10?
Take a look at real life sometime. I know a number of people where 'stats'
just do not apply. Try telling men holding multiple jobs to make ends meet
that the women they are paying child support to are 'worse off'. If this IS
a major problem for women, then give the child custody to the man and have the
woman pay child support, regardless of how many jobs she needs to hold to do
so.
> 40% of the poor were children.
Interesting. I thought ALL children were poor since they do not have income.
Does this mean they come from poor families?
> Women were more likely to be poor than men (one woman in six lived
> in poverty, compared to one man in eight.)
Gee, that still says that 5 out of 6 women are NOT poor. Hmmmm.
|
822.319 | | RUSURE::MELVIN | Ten Zero, Eleven Zero Zero by Zero 2 | Fri Sep 04 1992 18:45 | 7 |
|
> In any case, 0.0% and <something less than 100% but way, way, way
> above 0.0%> are not "equal."
Well, your estimation of the 100% number was flawed; perhaps your estimate of
the 0% number is also flawed.
|
822.320 | | HDLITE::ZARLENGA | Michael Zarlenga, Alpha P/PEG | Sat Sep 05 1992 18:41 | 11 |
| .310> If a man is allowed to walk away "scott free," then he has a full
.310> 0.0% of the responsibility for pregnancy while the woman carries
.310> the remaining 100% (except for the portion carried by the rest of
.310> the taxpayers in our society, if she needs public assistance.)
Her choice, her responsibility.
And what's wrong with that?
By the way, I found the claim that abortion is "surgery on her sexual
organs" quite entertaining.
|
822.321 | | GORE::CONLON | | Sat Sep 05 1992 21:34 | 15 |
| RE: .320 Mike Z.
> Her choice, her responsibility.
Meanwhile, men would have 0.0% responsibility (as I've pointed out
before.)
> And what's wrong with that?
And this is supposed to be equality??
> By the way, I found the claim that abortion is "surgery on her sexual
> organs" quite entertaining.
It's about as funny as the idea of painful surgery on testicles.
|
822.322 | about that 'safe' birth control | FORTSC::WILDE | why am I not yet a dragon? | Sun Sep 06 1992 02:49 | 123 |
|
one of the most consistent tones of this dicussion as been hostility
on the part of men who feel they are victims of trickery when a woman
gets pregnant even though both partners have declared their
unwillingness to be parents - and even though the woman says she
is using birth control...and the disgust on the part of women
who feel that the woman who has an unplanned pregnancy must be stupid
or something to not use her birth control correctly. Both attitudes
are based on the premise that birth control is RELIABLE...and that is
the problem. THIS PREMISE IS NOT CORRECT. I was searching through the
publications about my house looking for some of the data I have acquired
through my reading...when my latest edition of Health magazine arrived..
and lo, here was a discussion that covers just this subject.
The Alan Guttmacher Institute, a leading think-tank for population
research, has amassed some very telling statistics. For instance,
over a 5 year period, 50% of the women using a diaphragm will experience at
least ONE unplanned pregnancy. As many as HALF of the women seeking
abortions WERE USING BIRTH CONTROL AT THE TIME THEY GOT PREGNANT. Now,
as we all know, or should know, there are many woman who simply cannot
accept abortion - with that information in mind, can't you imagine how
many women get pregnant, in spite of their efforts to prevent pregnancy,
and are forced by their own moral code to bring that pregnancy to
term? EVEN IF THEY CANNOT AFFORD THE BABY, ONCE PREGNANT THEY HAVE
NO OTHER OPTION BUT TO GIVE BIRTH...or be murderers.
The methods of birth control available to women are unreliable, often
complicated to use, and frequently can be disabled by subtle changes
in the woman's hormonal balance or the use of commonly prescribed
antibiotics. There is virtually no research in the area of pregnancy
prevention going on by any major US pharmaceutical
manufacturer...because the religeous-right has been pressuring them
to stop manufacturing birth-control at all...and they are the
only organized voice on this subject at all. It is simpy easier to
NOT get involved - and the pharmaceutical manufacturers are doing
just that.
Some statistics that may help you understand the scope of the
problem:
Method of BC Number of pregnancies per 100 women
------------ -----------------------------------
diaphragm or
cerical cap Typically - 18/100; if using the method
"perfectly" and suffering no medical
conditions to impair use - 6/100
Condom Typically - 12/100; if using the method
"perfectly" and suffering no medical
conditions to impair use - 2/100
Spermicide Typically - 21/100; if using the method
"perfectly" and suffering no medical
conditions to impair use - 3/100
Natural/Rythm
method Typically - 20/100; if using the method
"perfectly" and suffering no medical
conditions to impair use - 1/100 to 9/100
depending on restrictiveness of use
Oral Contraceptive
Pill Typically - 3/100; perfect use - .1/100
minipill Typically and perfectly - .5/100
Norplant .04/100
Intrauterine Device Copper T: Typically - 4/100; perfect use - .8/100
(IUD) Progestasert: Typically - 4/100; perfect - 2/100
Sterilizations: Tubal: typically - .5/100; perfect - .2/100
Vasectomy: Typically - .2/100; perfect - .1/100
Perfect use is defined as following all instructions provided with the
birth control method "to the letter". Although some statistics may seem
very small - remember that these methods with the lowest/100 women
numbers are also the most popular methods used - and the
NUMBER of pregnant women in a given year is still very significant.
The article also outlines the reasons a woman may not be able to use
a given method - family history of high-blood pressure or breast or
cerical cancer eliminate the woman as a candidate for use of the
pill, for instance. IUD's wreck havoc on the woman who gets yeast
infections frequently - and can lead to internal infections which
can become life-threatening. IUD's can also be "silently" expelled
(the woman feels no pain or discomfort and is unaware of the loss
until she checks for the device - and it is gone - often AFTER her
partner notices it missing during intercourse).
The article stresses - the perfect use of a birth control method REDUCES
the risk of pregnancy - but it DOES NOT ERASE THE RISK ENTIRELY. Women
will get pregnant in spite of doing all the right things.
What does it all mean? I'm glad you asked, Binky....it means that it
is NOT okay for the man to presume he is safe from unwanted pregnancy
because his partner is using a birth control method...he must ALSO
TAKE RESPONSIBILITY FOR PREVENTION. This doubles your chances of
avoiding an unwanted, and ultimately, tragic pregnancy. It means that
those of you who are sure you were tricked or "robbed of your sperm
so she could have a baby" may very well be hooting up the wrong tree.
You may very well have been caught by inadequate preventative methods
used as consciously as is humanly possible....and she wasn't tricking
you - but was caught in the same trap as you were - and she is stuck
NOW as well.
It also means that we, the great unwashed hoard out here, need to
adjust our thinking about women who end up pregnant when they say
they didn't want to - they probably MEAN it, and they were probably
REALLY TRYING TO AVOID PREGNANCY. It also means we need to let
the researchers know that we want safe, effective, easy-to-use
and cheap forms of birth control - and we want it NOW.
The hostility a man feels when he is suddenly facing losing income
for 18-20 years for a child he doesn't want is understandable...and,
unfortunately, once the pregnancy occurs, it may not be possible for
the woman to abort OR put a child she has carried for 9 months up
for adoption - both acts can be life-destroying for the woman who
cannot accept them as the "RIGHT", or moral decision. The only
way a man can truly protect his interests in this issue is to work
with the woman to PREVENT the pregnancy...and, as the statistics
show, that takes BOTH PARTNERS USING BIRTH CONTROL EVERY TIME YOU
HAVE SEX.
|
822.323 | | HDLITE::ZARLENGA | Michael Zarlenga, Alpha P/PEG | Sun Sep 06 1992 18:50 | 4 |
| .321> Meanwhile, men would have 0.0% responsibility (as I've pointed out
.321> before.)
Not quite, but it is as you have erroneously claimed before.
|
822.324 | | HDLITE::ZARLENGA | Michael Zarlenga, Alpha P/PEG | Sun Sep 06 1992 18:54 | 12 |
| re:.322
I think we all realize that only abstinence is 100% effective.
That said, yet AGAIN, now let us proceed to dismantle the "TRICKERY"
strawwoman ... it doesn't matter how they got where they are, through
trickey, clumsiness, forgetfulness, or revenge. We have a couple and
the woman is pregnant.
She can choose not to accept the pregnancy, abort the fetus, and that's
that. That is her decision and hers alone. REGARDLESS of what events
and motives led to the pregnancy.
|
822.325 | | GORE::CONLON | | Sun Sep 06 1992 19:09 | 13 |
| RE: .323 Mike Z.
.321> Meanwhile, men would have 0.0% responsibility (as I've pointed out
.321> before.)
> Not quite, but it is as you have erroneously claimed before.
Men would have 0.0% responsibility for using birth control and 0.0%
responsibility for supporting any possible children.
With these two responsibilities eliminated, what other responsibilities
would the man have (besides his own sexual gratification?)
|
822.326 | let's compare, shall we? | HDLITE::ZARLENGA | Michael Zarlenga, Alpha P/PEG | Sun Sep 06 1992 19:23 | 4 |
| .325> With these two responsibilities eliminated, what other responsibilities
.325> would the man have (besides his own sexual gratification?)
With an abortion, what responsibilities does the woman have?
|
822.327 | Men would have to have testicular surgery to make things equal. | GORE::CONLON | | Mon Sep 07 1992 02:07 | 12 |
| RE: .326 Mike Z.
> With an abortion, what responsibilities does the woman have?
Women have the responsibility of dealing with abortion, adoption
or raising the child. All of these options (including abortion!)
involve life risks, affects on health *and* the woman's personal
time and/or money.
Perhaps it would be easier to understand if men were forced to
undergo physical consequences (such as painful surgery directly
on their testicles) each time they get a woman pregnant accidently.
|
822.328 | | HDLITE::ZARLENGA | Michael Zarlenga, Alpha P/PEG | Mon Sep 07 1992 11:41 | 27 |
| .327> -< Men would have to have testicular surgery to make things equal. >-
That's rich, I'll say. D&Cs and D&Vs aren't surgery on the sexual
organs any more than a tooth cleaning is dental surgery.
.327>> With an abortion, what responsibilities does the woman have?
.327> Women have the responsibility of dealing with abortion, adoption
.327> or raising the child. All of these options (including abortion!)
.327> involve life risks, affects on health *and* the woman's personal
.327> time and/or money.
No, _with_an_abortion_, what are her responsibilities? The things
you listed are some of her concerns with a pregnancy, all of which,
coincidentally, can also shared by the man, whether you want to admit
it, or not.
.327> Perhaps it would be easier to understand if men were forced to
.327> undergo physical consequences (such as painful surgery directly
.327> on their testicles) each time they get a woman pregnant accidently.
Perhaps it would be easier to understand if you would leave the lucid
exaggerations out of the discussion. Surgery on the sexual organs?
Brownmiller would be proud! What's next, a claim that it's also rape
since invasion of an body orifice occurs?
|
822.329 | | BRADOR::HATASHITA | Hard wear engineer | Mon Sep 07 1992 11:48 | 8 |
| > Men would have 0.0% responsibility for using birth control and 0.0%
> responsibility for supporting any possible children.
Maybe in the crowd you hang out with. If you're speaking from
experience, then the men you associate with have no self respect. If
you're speaking from impression, then I suggest you take the chip off
your shoulder before proceeding.
|
822.330 | | HDLITE::ZARLENGA | Michael Zarlenga, Alpha P/PEG | Mon Sep 07 1992 16:46 | 1 |
| Oh Kris, you're a man, you couldn't possibly understand.
|
822.331 | | GORE::CONLON | | Mon Sep 07 1992 17:53 | 21 |
| RE: .329 Kris
>> Men would have 0.0% responsibility for using birth control and 0.0%
>> responsibility for supporting any possible children.
> Maybe in the crowd you hang out with.
Go back and read the note (with comprehension this time.)
I was speaking about the prospective situation where men are absolved
of all responsibility for supporting children they sire.
*IF* men are absolved (in the future) of all such responsibility,
then we'll have a situation where (as stated above) "Men *WOULD* have
[in the future] 0.0% responsibility for using birth control and 0.0%
responsibility for supporting any possible children."
> If you're speaking from experience...
The rest of your note is meaningless since you were laboring under a
misapprehension. Try again.
|
822.332 | | GORE::CONLON | | Mon Sep 07 1992 18:13 | 41 |
| RE: .328 Mike Z.
.327>-< Men would have to have testicular surgery to make things equal. >-
> That's rich, I'll say. D&Cs and D&Vs aren't surgery on the sexual
> organs any more than a tooth cleaning is dental surgery.
If the teeth were located well inside a person's body (and required
a surgical procedure to acquire access to the places being cleaned,)
it would be called a surgery as well. However, teeth are easily
accessible without surgical intervention, so they constitute an
entirely different level of treatment.
> No, _with_an_abortion_, what are her responsibilities?
An abortion doesn't just happen because someone wishes it so. The
responsibilities involved with abortion require life risks, affects
on health *and* the woman's personal time and/or money.
> The things you listed are some of her concerns with a pregnancy, all
> of which, coincidentally, can also shared by the man, whether you want
> to admit it, or not.
Aside from the life and health risks (which obviously can NOT be shared
by the man,) I've never denied that men have the capacity to share some
of the responsibility. We're talking about whether or not men should
be required to share it.
If you absolve men from all responsibilities in unplanned pregnancies,
then they have 0.0% required responsibility.
> Perhaps it would be easier to understand if you would leave the lucid
> exaggerations out of the discussion. Surgery on the sexual organs?
> Brownmiller would be proud! What's next, a claim that it's also rape
> since invasion of an body orifice occurs?
Do you understand that women's reproductive organs are located inside
the body (requiring surgical procedures to perform medical operations
on them?) The outside of a woman's uterus may be accessible through
a body orifice, but operations on this organ most often require some
level of surgical access to the INSIDE of the uterus.
|
822.333 | | BRADOR::HATASHITA | Hard wear engineer | Mon Sep 07 1992 18:50 | 10 |
| > Go back and read the note (with comprehension this time.)
Go back and write it to be comprehendible.
You have been speaking as if men would scatter from the responsibility
of raising a child if legislation didn't bind them to their offspring.
The men I know and associate with are better than that. Much better
than that. And I get tired of reading note after note after note of
angst ridden, gender slamming, sexist babble.
|
822.334 | | HDLITE::ZARLENGA | Michael Zarlenga, Alpha P/PEG | Mon Sep 07 1992 20:24 | 4 |
| .332> If you absolve men from all responsibilities in unplanned pregnancies,
.332> then they have 0.0% required responsibility.
Saying that over and over doesn't make it the truth.
|
822.335 | | GORE::CONLON | | Mon Sep 07 1992 23:48 | 21 |
| RE: .333 Kris
> Go back and write it to be comprehendible.
If you continue to have trouble following the discussion in this
topic, ask questions. I'll be glad to help you understand.
> You have been speaking as if men would scatter from the responsibility
> of raising a child if legislation didn't bind them to their offspring.
> The men I know and associate with are better than that. Much better
> than that.
Others here seem to think that men have absolutely ZERO responsibility
for children they did not want to create, so speak to *them* about how
many men are better than that.
> And I get tired of reading note after note after note of
> angst ridden, gender slamming, sexist babble.
Well, I can't stop others from slamming women with the sexist babble
I've seen in this topic. Sorry.
|
822.336 | | GORE::CONLON | | Mon Sep 07 1992 23:54 | 11 |
| RE: .334 Mike Z.
.332>If you absolve men from all responsibilities in unplanned pregnancies,
.332>then they have 0.0% required responsibility.
> Saying that over and over doesn't make it the truth.
If men are absolved from ALL responsibilities in unplanned pregnancies,
then what REQUIRED responsibilities do they still have for unplanned
pregnancies?
|
822.337 | I confess, I might've missed this ... where is it? | HDLITE::ZARLENGA | Michael Zarlenga, Alpha P/PEG | Tue Sep 08 1992 00:10 | 9 |
| .335> Others here seem to think that men have absolutely ZERO responsibility
.335> for children they did not want to create, so speak to *them* about how
.335> many men are better than that.
Really?! That's simply amazing! Who thinks that ...?
I hope you're not confusing "should have less responsibility" with
"[do] have absolutely ZERO responsibility." Such an exaggeration
might possibly be an intellectually dishonest misrepresentation ...
|
822.338 | | LAVETA::CONLON | | Tue Sep 08 1992 01:02 | 17 |
| RE: .337 Mike Z.
.335> Others here seem to think that men have absolutely ZERO responsibility
.335> for children they did not want to create, so speak to *them* about how
.335> many men are better than that.
> Really?! That's simply amazing! Who thinks that ...?
No one, I hope. Men *do* (and *should*) bear some of the responsibility
for children they sire. If you agree, I'm glad.
> I hope you're not confusing "should have less responsibility" with
> "[do] have absolutely ZERO responsibility."
"Less responsibility" for their children than whom? (And if men should
be required to have *some* responsibilities for their children, please
list the responsibilities that should be required of men.)
|
822.339 | | LAVETA::CONLON | | Tue Sep 08 1992 01:14 | 23 |
| By the way, Mike Z., if people are saying that men should be asked to
pay less money (per father) than the courts are sometimes asking of
men (i.e., the cases of men who live in cars after making their child
support payments,) then I do agree that men should have less of this
financial burden.
I'd like the court system to be fairer. Each case should be taken on
its own merit (to account for two-career divorcing couples by having
arrangements that acknowledge the Mom's ability to provide a good deal
of the support on her own.) Plus, I'd like to see more joint custody
as well as equal responsibility for child support regardless of sex
(based on the amount that would be fair for a person of EITHER sex to
pay.)
I don't believe that most of these changes will become common until
women are closer to equal opportunity in employment, though. As long
as men make most of the money, our society is going to expect them to
use it to support their children (to avoid having society burdened
with the growing problem of supporting the children of absent Dads.)
If folks here have NOT been saying that men should get off 'scott free'
after getting a woman pregnant (simply because the woman has the choice
to abort,) then I'm glad.
|
822.340 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | Let us prey | Tue Sep 08 1992 09:02 | 18 |
| > Waydaminit! You're saying that somebody can _buy_ custody and
> visitation rights?
If it is one's "responsibility" to "support" a child, then this responsibility
is not restricted to just paying the bills. Here again we see that it is
completely acceptable to enslave men. Just because you are considered to be
responsible for the child, that doesn't mean you should have any actual rights.
What garbage. You, as a man, should be happy that by paying what some random
judge decides is your "fair share" that you have the right to remain out of
prison so you can continue to pay, pay, pay! Who could ask for anything more?
>But paying the bills does not, and should not,
> automatically allow someone to act as parent.
Unless you are _proved_ to be unfit, why the hell not? You want to hold men
responsible for their kids only to the extent that they fork over the cold hard
cash. But they get no say over what happens to the money. They get no say over
what happens to the kid. How incredibly one way. (As per usual...)
|
822.341 | | BRADOR::HATASHITA | Hard wear engineer | Tue Sep 08 1992 10:01 | 15 |
| > Others here seem to think that men have absolutely ZERO responsibility
> for children they did not want to create, so speak to *them* about how
> many men are better than that.
And you think that I have trouble following the discussion?
I have learned that one of the least constructive activities here is to
come between a person with an axe and their grindstone but I got to say
that if this is the message you're reading into the notes posted here I
think that you're once again jousting with windmills of your own
creation.
Maybe it would be constructive to take off those crimson tinted glasses
and read the words posted here like they were written by humans rather
than penis-bearing ogres.
|
822.342 | You're still at it, I see. | GORE::CONLON | | Tue Sep 08 1992 10:36 | 25 |
| RE: .341 Kris
>> Others here seem to think that men have absolutely ZERO responsibility
>> for children they did not want to create, so speak to *them* about how
>> many men are better than that.
> And you think that I have trouble following the discussion?
Well, I keep asking what required responsibilities men would still have
after men have been absolved of all required responsibilities in the
case of unplanned pregnancy and all I keep getting is this indignation.
If men were absolved of all required responsibility for children they
did not wish to sire, why don't YOU try telling me which required
responsibilities would be left (if you can.)
> I have learned that one of the least constructive activities here is to
> come between a person with an axe and their grindstone but I got to say
> ... ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
Yeah, I've noticed that you can't seem to stop yourself from centering
your argument around personal remarks about me (rather than sticking to
the discussion at hand.)
It doesn't help your case (if you have one, that is.)
|
822.343 | | VALKYR::RUST | | Tue Sep 08 1992 11:19 | 52 |
| Re .340:
>> Waydaminit! You're saying that somebody can _buy_ custody and
>> visitation rights?
>
> If it is one's "responsibility" to "support" a child, then this responsibility
>is not restricted to just paying the bills. Here again we see that it is
>completely acceptable to enslave men. Just because you are considered to be
>responsible for the child, that doesn't mean you should have any actual rights.
>What garbage. You, as a man, should be happy that by paying what some random
>judge decides is your "fair share" that you have the right to remain out of
>prison so you can continue to pay, pay, pay! Who could ask for anything more?
>
This is not my opinion at all. I was simply responding to your
statement in reply .306:
> How generous! I think that if a man is going to be expected to pay 1/2
>the upkeep of a child (or more!), he should be entitled to joint physical
>custody and equal say in the upbringing of the child.
"Entitled" is the word you used, with no qualification as to the man's
fitness for custody. As you point out, unfitness should be proven,
never assumed - but, if it _is_ proven, wouldn't you agree that, even
though a parent (either parent) might still be held financially
responsible for the child, that parent should not get equal custodial
rights?
Or do you believe that if a parent is found unfit to have custody, that
parent should no longer be held liable for support?
>>But paying the bills does not, and should not,
>> automatically allow someone to act as parent.
>
> Unless you are _proved_ to be unfit, why the hell not? You want to hold men
>responsible for their kids only to the extent that they fork over the cold hard
>cash. But they get no say over what happens to the money. They get no say over
>what happens to the kid. How incredibly one way. (As per usual...)
Beg your pardon? I never said the cash was the main thing or the only
thing, nor have I advocated "slavery". I simply pointed out that it is
possible for someone to be responsible for having created a child, and
yet not be fit to take care of it. This applies to women as well as
men, and - *if they are proven unfit* - they should not be allowed
sole charge of the child.
This isn't necessarily all-or-nothing; it might be workable to allow
communication by mail or phone, or supervised visits, etc. However, the
fact that someone is held responsible for a portion of the support
payments should not, in itself, have anything to do with whether or not
that person is entitled to visitation or custody.
-b
|
822.344 | | HDLITE::ZARLENGA | Michael Zarlenga, Alpha P/PEG | Tue Sep 08 1992 13:07 | 12 |
| .335> Others here seem to think that men have absolutely ZERO responsibility
.335> for children they did not want to create, so speak to *them* about how
.335> many men are better than that.
.337> Really?! That's simply amazing! Who thinks that ...?
.338> No one, I hope. Men *do* (and *should*) bear some of the responsibility
.338> for children they sire. If you agree, I'm glad.
As I suspected. No one said it, it was a fabrication.
Please refrain from distorting the truth to make false points.
|
822.345 | | HDLITE::ZARLENGA | Michael Zarlenga, Alpha P/PEG | Tue Sep 08 1992 13:08 | 4 |
| .341> Maybe it would be constructive to take off those crimson tinted glasses
.341> and read the words posted here like they were written by humans rather
Given the admission in .338, I'd say they're more like welder's goggles.
|
822.346 | My observation still stands as accurate. | GORE::CONLON | | Tue Sep 08 1992 13:14 | 23 |
| RE: .344 Mike Z.
.338> No one, I hope. Men *do* (and *should*) bear some of the responsibility
.338> for children they sire. If you agree, I'm glad.
> As I suspected. No one said it, it was a fabrication.
Nice try, Mike. No cigar.
Until someone points out the required responsibilities men WOULD still
have after men are absolved from all required responsibilities for
children they sire, then you're still left with men having ZERO required
responsibilities for unplanned pregnancies.
> Please refrain from distorting the truth to make false points.
If you believe men should be required to be responsible for the
children they did not wish to sire, please state the extent and
nature of these responsibilities. So far, the sum total of such
named responsibilities is zero.
I've asked for this information at least a dozen times now. My
point stands as an accurate observation.
|
822.348 | There's no admission. | GORE::CONLON | | Tue Sep 08 1992 13:17 | 9 |
| RE: .345 Mike Z.
> Given the admission in .338, I'd say they're more like welder's goggles.
Admission??
You're hallucinating (unless you're simply telling a deliberate
falsehood.)
|
822.349 | | HDLITE::ZARLENGA | Michael Zarlenga, Alpha P/PEG | Tue Sep 08 1992 13:23 | 5 |
| .335: Some men here ...
.337: What men here?
.338: None, I hope.
.344: Then you made that up.
.346: No, umm ... errr... umm...
|
822.350 | | AIMHI::RAUH | I survived the Cruel Spa | Tue Sep 08 1992 13:27 | 18 |
| .335> Others here seem to think that men have absolutely ZERO
responsibility
.335> for children they did not want to create, so speak to *them*
about how
.335> many men are better than that.
Sounds kinda broad brushing. Perhaps some men set up to look bad. Too
bad there is not stats on that.
And of course there are some here who think that many women with or
with out custody are very irresponsible to the upbringing of the
children.
Kinda fashionalble politics. Kinda like those Nam days, when it was
fashionable to be anti establishment. Now we are the establishment.
Fashionable to bash men. Esp the deadbeats.... Bunch of rasputian
gender irresponsible low lifes we are. Yup, yup, yup.
|
822.351 | The sum total STILL adds up to 'zero responsibilities for men.' | GORE::CONLON | | Tue Sep 08 1992 13:33 | 12 |
| RE: .349 Mike Z.
Again, I see that you've managed to avoid the question ("What required
responsibilities would men still have after men have been absolved of
all required responsibilities for children they did not wish to sire?")
If most of the men in this topic DO NOT believe that men should have
the option of getting away "scott free" after an unwanted pregnancy,
then simply name the required responsibilities men would still have.
If you can't do this, then my observation still stands (no matter how
long and how hard you tap dance around it.)
|
822.352 | | CSC32::HADDOCK | Don't Tell My Achy-Breaky Back | Tue Sep 08 1992 13:41 | 7 |
|
re .351
Still playing the "if you can't prove your point to my satisfaction
then you loose" game, eh, Suzanne?
fred();
|
822.353 | | GORE::CONLON | | Tue Sep 08 1992 13:46 | 11 |
| RE: .350 Rauh
.335> Others here seem to think that men have absolutely ZERO
.335> responsibility for children they did not want to create,
.335> so speak to *them* about how many men are better than that.
> Sounds kinda broad brushing. Perhaps some men set up to look bad. Too
> bad there is not stats on that.
Is "men are better than that" a broadbrush you dislike??? If so,
complain to Kris about it (I got it from him.)
|
822.354 | | PCCAD::DINGELDEIN | PHOENIX | Tue Sep 08 1992 13:53 | 12 |
| The argument is based on responsibility before a child is born. If you
beleive abortion is murder, then the solution is to fully support any
child brought to term. But abortion is a legal choice.
If a pregnancy is allowed to continue past the third trimester then
the argument about responsibility has no basis other than to support
the child. I do not see anyone arguing this point!
The woman can choose to allow the man to go his way or force him to
comply with her decision. This is the issue. So, if you are
anti-abortion then this argument has no basis. If you are pro-choice,
then IMO men have to have a say in whether they are to have parental
responsibility imposed on them by someone elses choice. Equal
responsibility=equal choices.
|
822.355 | | GORE::CONLON | | Tue Sep 08 1992 13:53 | 11 |
| RE: .352 Fred
> Still playing the "if you can't prove your point to my satisfaction
> then you loose" game, eh, Suzanne?
Nope. But you're playing the "Maybe if I jab at her, she'll get
too distracted to notice that her opponents don't have a valid
argument" game again.
I asked a simple question. They haven't answered it. You can jab
and stab at me all you like, Fred, but I do still notice this.
|
822.356 | | IAMOK::KATZ | Language is a Virus | Tue Sep 08 1992 13:55 | 44 |
| I've been following this discussion but I won't pretend to have read
all replies in great detail.
I've read a lot of back and forth banter and I must say I find myself
much more closely identifying with Dian's point of view (to readers of
=wn= this should come as a "no duh" revelation), but I do wonder what
folks expect to accomplish in this dialogue. I can't say that I've
heard much in the way of concrete suggestions to make things better.
The title of the string itself seems kind of hard to swallow. "The
Line" is a concept that changes from relationship to relationship
doesn't it? Different people require different things from people.
I would personally think it is a given that it is up to the woman to
decide whether or not an accidental pregnancy results in a birth. It
is her body, plain and simple, and I don't believe anyone has the right
to tell her "Yes, you will carry to term" or "No, you won't carry to
term" The male's contribution of genetic material just doesn't weigh
as heavily as her sovereignty over what is most fundamentally hers.
Of course, it is also a given that it would be really *really* nice if
people felt close enough to their sexual partners to be able to talk
this out. Whether they are in a monogomous relationship or married or
whatever, it would be ideal that adults could discuss and come to
understandings on such matters.
But that is an ideal, not the ubiquitous reality, so I still stand by
the woman being the final arbitrator of that choice.
And as far as the law is concerned, there is an old, old assumption
that if a child is the result of sex, then both of the biological
parents are held responsible whether or not both are equally
enthusiastic about the birth. I don't really see this changing much
because the majority application of it is in situations where both
parents are involved. The law is not good at creating permutations for
every possible scenario.
I'm left wondering just what people think should be done? There are
premarital contracts...should people draw up pre-conjugal contracts to
determine fiscal liability should the unexpected occur?
What's the practical way of approaching this?
------->daniel
|
822.357 | Give it a rest | SALEM::KUPTON | I got Skeeels too! | Tue Sep 08 1992 14:02 | 42 |
|
Someone help me out:
Pregnacy ......
From a traditional view? A condition that is part of the
procreative cycle that for millions of years was not even considered to
be anything but normal. Less than 100 years ago, native american women
would stop, squat, bite off the umbilical cord and walk 25 more miles
with the newborn attached to a breast.
From the 1990's feminist view? A life threatening, severely life
limiting medical condition that is the direct result of an assault by a
male of the species that results in poverty and pyschologoical damage
to female.
Give me a break!!!!
What I've read in many of these notes is quite simple: Abort a
pregnancy or carry to term. Use birth control to prevent the
possibility of a pregnancy. Each partner is equally responsible for
birth control prior to the sexual act resulting in prenancy.
What's not to understand?
If a pregnacy is carried to term and the procreators are not
attached in law or emotion, a financial arrangement to aid in the
upbringing of the offspring is required by the father if he does not
have physical custody. In the same vein, he should have access to the
child that he has sired and is contributing to the well being thereof.
What's not to understand?
The title of this conference should be changed from MENNOTES to
DESTRUCTION OF THE TRADITIONAL MALE. This note has turned from topics
of interest to men to some kind of re-education of men to topics of
interest to subgroups that want to reeducate men to their way of
thinking.........
K
|
822.358 | | GORE::CONLON | | Tue Sep 08 1992 14:07 | 39 |
| RE: .354
> The argument is based on responsibility before a child is born. If you
> beleive abortion is murder, then the solution is to fully support any
> child brought to term.
If who believes abortion is murder (the mother or the father?)
> But abortion is a legal choice.
> If a pregnancy is allowed to continue past the third trimester then
> the argument about responsibility has no basis other than to support
> the child. I do not see anyone arguing this point!
Right. Folks are only arguing about whether or not men should be
required to hold this responsibility for the child.
> The woman can choose to allow the man to go his way or force him to
> comply with her decision. This is the issue. So, if you are
> anti-abortion then this argument has no basis.
'Pro-choice' means wanting individual women to have the right to
choose. Many pro-choice women do not consider abortion possible
for themselves as individuals (which means that abortion is not
an option since these individuals are anti-abortion for themselves.)
In this case, the woman has no choice.
> If you are pro-choice, then IMO men have to have a say in whether they
> are to have parental responsibility imposed on them by someone elses
> choice. Equal responsibility=equal choices.
It almost sounds as though you are suggesting that the deciding factor
should be the woman's views on abortions (so that if she is pro-choice,
then the man should not be required to have any financial responsibility
for the child if she decides not to abort - if she is anti-abortion,
the man would still be required to support the child.)
If this were law, how would a court determine the personal views of an
individual woman about abortion?
|
822.359 | | AIMHI::RAUH | I survived the Cruel Spa | Tue Sep 08 1992 14:08 | 15 |
| But if there are no equal choices in the decision of the birth of a
child. Than its a moot point. So, no decision+woman
choice=irresponsible men? Doesn't add up to me. Sounds like an equation
that is a set up to fail for men.
Susane,
You have been bashing this dead hourse call men irresponsible. Got to
have been a moment where we were.I have met some real winner women
out there who have custody and are fostering future criminal men and
women. Just because you can make babies doesn't mean you know all the
worldly things of raising them. I am not smashing cake in your face on it.
Perhaps you should forsake the next NOW meeting to attend a fathers
support group. You can see what the terms of fairness are and are not.
|
822.360 | | GORE::CONLON | | Tue Sep 08 1992 14:16 | 7 |
| RE: .359 RAUH
I'm not a member of NOW.
If you can get a translator to help you post your thoughts in this
topic, I'll respond to more of what you write next time.
|
822.361 | | DELNI::STHILAIRE | makes ya stop & wonder why | Tue Sep 08 1992 14:17 | 16 |
| re .357, are you saying pregnancy cannot be life threatening? Haven't
you ever heard about all the women who used to die in childbirth before
C-sections were perfected. (And C-sections are no picnic. It's a
major operation and extremely painful.) If I had had to squat in the
woods like an Indian to have my daughter, I wouldn't have survived
because her head was too large for natural childbirth. I hate to hear
people talk about having babies as though it was the easiest thing in
the world, when I know I'd be dead today if I hadn't had a C-section.
re .359, the only men who are being called irresponsible are men who
refuse to use birth control and then complain about women getting
pregnant. Also, men who refuse to help support children that they
fathered, even if by accident.
Lorna
|
822.362 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | Let us prey | Tue Sep 08 1992 14:18 | 24 |
| > "Entitled" is the word you used, with no qualification as to the man's
> fitness for custody.
Well, wouldn't you say that the mother is entitled to custody, without
qualifying that to say "unless she is proved to be unfit"? I didn't think
I had to be explicit to that degree, hence I apparently misundertood your
objection.
>wouldn't you agree that, even
> though a parent (either parent) might still be held financially
> responsible for the child, that parent should not get equal custodial
> rights?
Of course.
>However, the
> fact that someone is held responsible for a portion of the support
> payments should not, in itself, have anything to do with whether or not
> that person is entitled to visitation or custody.
I disagree. I think it should have _something_ to do with it. Like every other
aspect of the relationship, it is a factor to consider. (IMO)
The Doctah
|
822.363 | clear to the other side of the argument | CSC32::HADDOCK | Don't Tell My Achy-Breaky Back | Tue Sep 08 1992 14:21 | 21 |
| re .355
>Nope. But you're playing the "Maybe if I jab at her, she'll get
>too distracted to notice that her opponents don't have a valid
>argument" game again.
By _whose_ judgement?
>I asked a simple question. They haven't answered it. You can jab
>and stab at me all you like, Fred, but I do still notice this.
Way back somewhere I asked wheather or not women should be allowed
to shirk _their_ financial responsibility by remaining on welfare
because it paid more or was more convient than what they could find
otherwise. Nobody bothered to answer that question either.
I don't think it's just men who are shirking thier responsibility
(financial and otherwise) to the unintended results of sex. It's
just more _politically corret_ for women to do so.
fred();
|
822.364 | Agreed, Lorna! | GORE::CONLON | | Tue Sep 08 1992 14:25 | 12 |
| RE: .361 Lorna
> re .357, are you saying pregnancy cannot be life threatening? Haven't
> you ever heard about all the women who used to die in childbirth before
> C-sections were perfected.
Women still die in childbirth (even in expensive hospitals in the U.S.)
from complications.
In the olden days, they considered pregnancy and childbirth 'no big
deal' because society just accepted that SO MANY WOMEN DIED FROM IT.
Many children died in those days, too. No big deal, right?
|
822.365 | | AIMHI::RAUH | I survived the Cruel Spa | Tue Sep 08 1992 14:30 | 10 |
| .360
> <<< Note 822.351 by GORE::CONLON >>>
>-< The sum total STILL adds up to 'zero responsibilities for men.' >-
Does this refresh you shorten memory?
Funny about that NOW stuff. I was mis-guided again. I though I read
that someplace else...... Gee, now if I can remember where I can find
that one....:)
|
822.366 | | PCCAD::DINGELDEIN | PHOENIX | Tue Sep 08 1992 14:36 | 10 |
| If a woman had to consider she was financially on her own, do you think
she would be more diligent about who she allows to have sex with her or
the terms by which sex occurs. And if she fell on hard times she could
still get aid but the aid would be directly related to her effort to
become self-reliant? If she was faced with a "hearing" before the start
of the second trimester to determine "the parties" intent would she be
more cognizant of the implications of sexual submission?
Is it not true that behavior modification only occurs when there is
reward or avoidance?
|
822.367 | | GORE::CONLON | | Tue Sep 08 1992 14:54 | 15 |
| RE: .366
> If a woman had to consider she was financially on her own, do you think
> she would be more diligent about who she allows to have sex with her or
> the terms by which sex occurs.
Men live with the threat of paying child support for 18 years (!!!)
yet most men still do not take responsibility for birth control.
> Is it not true that behavior modification only occurs when there is
> reward or avoidance?
Why doesn't it help modify men's behavior, then? Why don't more men
say, "I'm never, ever, ever, EVER going to have sex without using
protection as long as I live (when I don't want to have a child)"...?
|
822.368 | | PCCAD::DINGELDEIN | PHOENIX | Tue Sep 08 1992 15:01 | 6 |
| BECAUSE THEY TRUST A WOMAN!
If she changes her mind or chooses to be irresponsible...
Believe me, men are changing their behavior to avoid this problem. In
past years a woman would avoid the "taboo" of illegitamacy but today it
seems more "permissable", especially when "men get woman pregnant" and
she can get the DOR to chase down the supposed "DEAD BEAT DAD".
|
822.369 | Whom are men really trusting, though?? | GORE::CONLON | | Tue Sep 08 1992 15:07 | 23 |
| RE: .368
> BECAUSE THEY TRUST A WOMAN!
> If she changes her mind or chooses to be irresponsible...
> Believe me, men are changing their behavior to avoid this problem.
No birth control is 100% effective (so it isn't just a matter of
trusting a woman. It's also a matter of trusting the birth control
method being used to be 100% effective when IT SIMPLY ISN'T!)
If men were responsible for their OWN birth control (as well as women
being responsible for theirs at the same time,) the chances of unplanned
pregnancy would be reduced a great deal. But many/most men still won't
take this responsibility unto themselves (complaining instead, "Well,
I TRUSTED HER" to be responsible for both of them.)
> In past years a woman would avoid the "taboo" of illegitamacy but today
> it seems more "permissable", especially when "men get woman pregnant"
> and she can get the DOR to chase down the supposed "DEAD BEAT DAD".
Well, in the past, people used to say, "She got herself pregnant" (as
if the man wasn't even in the room.) Men can't get off the hook quite
as easily as they did before.
|
822.370 | cuts both ways | CSC32::HADDOCK | Don't Tell My Achy-Breaky Back | Tue Sep 08 1992 15:10 | 17 |
| re .366
>Why doesn't it help modify men's behavior, then? Why don't more men
>say, "I'm never, ever, ever, EVER going to have sex without using
>protection as long as I live (when I don't want to have a child)"...?
That's kind of like asking "Why would men over the milinia enter
into *any* kind of relationship that required him to turn over
the lion's share of the results of his labor and often putting
himself into outright danger to someone else's benefit"?
The object of the "women's movement" seems to be to get rid of
the relationship and responsibility and keep the finances.
The "sexual revolution" has been a two edged sword for both
sexes.
fred();
|
822.371 | | GORE::CONLON | | Tue Sep 08 1992 15:30 | 24 |
| RE: .370 Fred
>> Why doesn't it help modify men's behavior, then? Why don't more men
>> say, "I'm never, ever, ever, EVER going to have sex without using
>> protection as long as I live (when I don't want to have a child)"...?
> That's kind of like asking "Why would men over the milinia enter
> into *any* kind of relationship that required him to turn over
> the lion's share of the results of his labor and often putting
> himself into outright danger to someone else's benefit"?
In other words, men don't use birth control because it's some sort of
"male trait" *NOT* to protect themselves from being stuck with child
support payments for 18 years???? (Is this what you're trying to say?)
> The object of the "women's movement" seems to be to get rid of
> the relationship and responsibility and keep the finances.
Not so.
> The "sexual revolution" has been a two edged sword for both
> sexes.
The women's movement and the sexual revolution are two separate things.
|
822.372 | | CSC32::HADDOCK | Don't Tell My Achy-Breaky Back | Tue Sep 08 1992 15:57 | 32 |
| rep .371
>> The object of the "women's movement" seems to be to get rid of
>> the relationship and responsibility and keep the finances.
>Not so.
To use your own logic, you haven't provided any credible evidence
that this is not so. In fact I can conclude from your line of
argument ( demanding that men pay support while discounting their
right to be a parent or the mother having any accountability )
that this is _indeed_ the case.
>In other words, men don't use birth control because it's some sort of
>"male trait" *NOT* to protect themselves from being stuck with child
>support payments for 18 years???? (Is this what you're trying to say?)
Actually I agree that in todays biggoted political climate that it is
purely assinine for men to not protect themselves from having *any*
children. I was also trying to point out the if you take Mother
Nature out of the question that the whole history of "family" doesn't
make much sinse for the man. But that's easier to say at 39 and four
kids, nine years of gorilla fighting, and twelve years of court battles,
than it was at 16 (;^)). The upshot is, don't discount mother nature.
Without her the human race would have died out a long time ago.
Actually I am on the complete other side of the argument. I don't
think women are being very responsible in this situation either.
I don't believe in "family values" per-se, but I do believe in
the "value of the family".
fred();
|
822.373 | it's a mystery to me | DELNI::STHILAIRE | makes ya stop & wonder why | Tue Sep 08 1992 16:17 | 9 |
| re .372, Fred, Where did Suzanne ever discredit men as parents or say
that women shouldn't take responsibility???????!!!! The women here are
saying that men should help support their biological children. That's
all. I never saw where anyone said men didn't have a right to visit
their children or even have physical custody. I don't understand how
you draw your conclusions.
Lorna
|
822.374 | | GORE::CONLON | | Tue Sep 08 1992 16:19 | 64 |
| RE: .372 Fred
>>> The object of the "women's movement" seems to be to get rid of
>>> the relationship and responsibility and keep the finances.
>> Not so.
> To use your own logic, you haven't provided any credible evidence
> that this is not so.
If you want to discuss this one aspect in depth, let's open a new
topic. I'd like to hear your explanation of the above claim so I
can discuss it with you. Otherwise, no argument is needed to
disprove such vague accusations on your part.
> In fact I can conclude from your line of
> argument ( demanding that men pay support while discounting their
> right to be a parent or the mother having any accountability )
> that this is _indeed_ the case.
My line of argument has *NOT* tried to deny fathers' rights to be
parents. Further, I've stated repeatedly that BOTH PEOPLE need to
take responsibility for birth control and the consequences of
accidental pregnancies (not just women!)
Your new jabs and stabs (and deliberate falsehoods) still aren't enough
to distract me from the discussion at hand, though.
> Actually I agree that in todays biggoted political climate that it is
> purely assinine for men to not protect themselves from having *any*
> children.
Remember - YOU'RE the one calling men assinine, not me. (Let's keep
the record straight on this.)
> I was also trying to point out the if you take Mother
> Nature out of the question that the whole history of "family" doesn't
> make much sinse for the man.
Don't you think men have the capacity to love and nurture children,
Fred? (I do.) You make it sound like men get absolutely NOTHING
from the family.
> But that's easier to say at 39 and four
> kids, nine years of gorilla fighting, and twelve years of court battles,
> than it was at 16 (;^)).
Doesn't your family "make sense" to you, Fred? (Is that what you're
saying?)
> The upshot is, don't discount mother nature.
> Without her the human race would have died out a long time ago.
Men have brains (to protect themselves from unwanted child support
payments for 18 years EVEN IF mother nature is urging men to spread
their seed to every fertile woman possible.)
> Actually I am on the complete other side of the argument. I don't
> think women are being very responsible in this situation either.
The situation would be greatly improved if it were more acceptable
for BOTH PERSONS to take responsibility for birth control in the
first place (since it takes TWO PEOPLE to have the kind of sex that
results in procreation.)
|
822.375 | yuck - you poor thing | DELNI::STHILAIRE | makes ya stop & wonder why | Tue Sep 08 1992 16:20 | 7 |
| re .372, no wonder you're bitter - 4 kids. Nothing on this earth could
have enticed me to ever get stuck with the responsibility of 4 kids.
Lorna
|
822.376 | | CSC32::HADDOCK | Don't Tell My Achy-Breaky Back | Tue Sep 08 1992 16:28 | 12 |
| re .373
>re .372, Fred, Where did Suzanne ever discredit men as parents or say
>that women shouldn't take responsibility???????!!!! The women here are
>saying that men should help support their biological children. That's
>all.
Maybe that's just the point. Ie THAT'S ALL. Every time the subject
of custody/visitation comes up in this file it gets ratholed into
(yet another) tirade on why men are scum.
fred();
|
822.377 | | GORE::CONLON | | Tue Sep 08 1992 16:30 | 10 |
| RE: .376 Fred
> Maybe that's just the point. Ie THAT'S ALL. Every time the subject
> of custody/visitation comes up in this file it gets ratholed into
> (yet another) tirade on why men are scum.
The only stand I've taken on "custody/visitation" is that more courts
should be awarding joint custody, Fred.
You hallucinated the rest.
|
822.378 | now you hit a nerve | CSC32::HADDOCK | Don't Tell My Achy-Breaky Back | Tue Sep 08 1992 16:40 | 21 |
| re .375
>re .372, no wonder you're bitter - 4 kids. Nothing on this earth could
>have enticed me to ever get stuck with the responsibility of 4 kids.
and I think that that is part of the point also.
Only one of my four were actually planned, but I fought a 9 1/2
year court battle in order to be able to give my children a decent
life and education. I paid every cent of the child support while
she _admitted_ _in court_ that she and her boyfried lived off of the
child support and AFDC. I *gladly* spend more than what the child
support was to send my children to private school because that is
the only way to get them caught up on their education after she
moved over 15 times (five times in one year) while she had custody.
Without the private school, thought, if I spent anywhere near on them
that I paid in "child support", they'd be so spoiled rotten that no
one could stand them. She has made only one child support payment
in over two years.
fred();
|
822.379 | | CSC32::HADDOCK | Don't Tell My Achy-Breaky Back | Tue Sep 08 1992 16:46 | 14 |
| re .377
>The only stand I've taken on "custody/visitation" is that more courts
>should be awarding joint custody, Fred.
And you have been (IMHO) one of the biggest offenders in ratholing
discussions and man-hate tirates.
>You hallucinated the rest.
If you want to stoop to that level...I think that it would be
debateable as to just who is on drugs around here.
fred();
|
822.380 | 'Hitting a nerve' is the drug you're on... | GORE::CONLON | | Tue Sep 08 1992 17:06 | 18 |
| RE: .379 Fred
>>The only stand I've taken on "custody/visitation" is that more courts
>>should be awarding joint custody, Fred.
> And you have been (IMHO) one of the biggest offenders in ratholing
> discussions and man-hate tirates.
More jabs and stabs, I see. You'll say absolutely anything to get
the discussion off-track. Well, I haven't forgotten what we're
really talking about here, so when your bitterness, hatred and noise
stop, the discussion will continue (whether you like it or not.)
> If you want to stoop to that level...I think that it would be
> debateable as to just who is on drugs around here.
Your bitterness and hatred are very powerful drugs (legal but totally
counterproductive for you.) I hope you recover from them some day.
|
822.381 | | CSC32::HADDOCK | Don't Tell My Achy-Breaky Back | Tue Sep 08 1992 17:25 | 6 |
|
re .380
Geeeeze! You got a lot of nerve Suzanne.
fred();
|
822.382 | | GORE::CONLON | | Tue Sep 08 1992 17:29 | 9 |
|
If men were absolved of ALL required responsibilities for unplanned
pregnancies, then what required responsibilities (for unplanned preg-
nancies) would men still have?
If men were allowed to walk away ("scott free") from unplanned
pregnancies, what required responsibilities would men still have
(such that men would have more than ZERO required responsibilities
for unplanned pregnancies)?
|
822.383 | | CSC32::HADDOCK | Don't Tell My Achy-Breaky Back | Tue Sep 08 1992 17:32 | 6 |
|
If women weren't automatically given custody of the childern,
I'll bet you'd see a lot different attitude from them also.
fred();
|
822.384 | Let's try this again... | GORE::CONLON | | Tue Sep 08 1992 17:33 | 9 |
|
If men were absolved of ALL required responsibilities for unplanned
pregnancies, then what required responsibilities (for unplanned preg-
nancies) would men still have?
If men were allowed to walk away ("scott free") from unplanned
pregnancies, what required responsibilities would men still have
(such that men would have more than ZERO required responsibilities
for unplanned pregnancies)?
|
822.385 | | CSC32::HADDOCK | Don't Tell My Achy-Breaky Back | Tue Sep 08 1992 17:35 | 5 |
|
er--Suzanne, I think you've entered an infinite loop.
fred();
|
822.386 | | PCCAD::DINGELDEIN | PHOENIX | Tue Sep 08 1992 17:39 | 8 |
| IMO most men would voluntarily be involved in the childs life because
most men understand that it is only humane to allow the child to know
their fathers. There would be some that would "walk away" but if the
system allowed voluntary involvement instead of "indentured servitude"
the results would be quite positive. If a child loses their mother to
death or insanity then I don't know many men that would abandon their
kids omce they know them. We are human, men that is.
|
822.387 | Stay on track, Fred. You can do it... | GORE::CONLON | | Tue Sep 08 1992 17:42 | 4 |
| RE: .385 Fred
Nope. I just keep returning to the main program after your NO_OPS! :>
|
822.388 | | DELNI::STHILAIRE | makes ya stop & wonder why | Tue Sep 08 1992 17:48 | 5 |
| re .383, if a man didn't want a child to be born in the first place, why
would he want custody of the child? It doesn't make sense.
Lorna
|
822.389 | | GORE::CONLON | | Tue Sep 08 1992 17:48 | 11 |
| RE: .386
> There would be some that would "walk away" but if the
> system allowed voluntary involvement instead of "indentured servitude"
> the results would be quite positive.
If a father's involvement were on a *purely voluntary basis*, then men
would have *ZERO required responsibilities* for unplanned pregnancies.
Is this what you want? (Yes or no?)
|
822.390 | | PCCAD::DINGELDEIN | PHOENIX | Tue Sep 08 1992 17:56 | 2 |
| In the cases where a woman was attempting to impose parental
responsibility, yes.
|
822.391 | | CSC32::M_EVANS | hate is not a family value | Tue Sep 08 1992 18:01 | 20 |
| I don't see any of the women saying that a man should just offer
financial support to his children. I see us saying that that is a
minimum responsibility. A father has moral responsibilities to his
kids, like love, the benifit of his advice, etc.
In an ideal situation with an unplanned pregancy, the father
immediately offers his support, physsical, financial and moral, to his
partner and his offspring. However, I only see some people trying to
whine this into financial support responsibilities only.
I have two questions,
1. If you despise the idea of having children with a given woman, why
are you having sex with her, especially given the status of birth
control in this country?
2. Don't you feel any love toward your offsping once they are an
inevitability?
Meg
|
822.392 | | CSC32::HADDOCK | Don't Tell My Achy-Breaky Back | Tue Sep 08 1992 18:03 | 17 |
| re 388
>re .383, if a man didn't want a child to be born in the first place, why
>would he want custody of the child? It doesn't make sense.
You're confusing not-wanted with not-planned. Why is it so hard
to believe that men do have some sense of responsibility and love
for their children (actually probably the majority of men). There
are many men who try to get custody in spite of the near impossibility
because they _believe_ in what is right for their children, and want
their children to have a decent life. There are _many_ of us who do not
believe in abortion and would take the child and raise it on our own
if need be rather than see our children buchered.
BUT WE'RE NOT GIVEN THAT CHOICE!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!11
fred();
|
822.393 | | GORE::CONLON | | Tue Sep 08 1992 18:05 | 10 |
| RE: .390
> In the cases where a woman was attempting to impose parental
> responsibility, yes.
Thank you for confirming that you want men to have ZERO required
responsibilities for unplanned pregnancies (which is in line with
the observations I made about this earlier.)
I appreciate it.
|
822.394 | that's it - men want ZERO responsibility | DELNI::STHILAIRE | makes ya stop & wonder why | Tue Sep 08 1992 18:12 | 15 |
| re .392, I'm talking about instances of unplanned pregnancies, between
unmarried couples, where the man would prefer that the woman have an
abortion, such as Dan has been talking about.
I realize that many men love the children they have had with their
spouses and former spouses.
Dan thinks men should have zero responsibility for unplanned
pregnancies, and that is what this topic is about. I doubt Dan would
want custody of a child that resulted from an unplanned pregnancy with
a casual sex partner, Fred. (Actually, I doubt you would either,
inspite of how much you love the 4 children you already have.)
Lorna
|
822.395 | | CSC32::HADDOCK | Don't Tell My Achy-Breaky Back | Tue Sep 08 1992 18:28 | 30 |
| re .391
>1. If you despise the idea of having children with a given woman, why
>are you having sex with her, especially given the status of birth
>control in this country?
1. If you despise the idea of having children with a given man, why
are you having sex with him, especially given the status of child
support in this country?
You're forgetting Mother Nature again. Even marriage and planning
children together doesn't guarantee that she won't change her mind
a year or two down the road.
>2. Don't you feel any love toward your offsping once they are an
>inevitability?
It becomes very difficult when the the only relationship that you
are **allowed** to have is financial. In fact it has been
statistically proven that men who have an ongoing relationship
and visitation are *by far* more likely to pay child support.
But I heard the judge who whas the head of the commission to
investigate child support and testified before the Congressional
committee on "deadbeat dads" state when asked about that fact,
"Visitation is someone else's problem". Now you'd think that if
payment of child support was the important thing you'd see more
support to enforce visitation and custody rights if that has been
proven to help.
fred();
|
822.396 | | GORE::CONLON | | Tue Sep 08 1992 18:29 | 31 |
| RE: .395 Fred
> It becomes very difficult when the the only relationship that you
> are **allowed** to have is financial.
Do you have any stats to show that it's ONLY the fathers who are not
allowed to visit their kids that skip out on child support payments?
(My understanding is that a lot of these 'deadbeat Dads' don't have
visitation BECAUSE they've skipped out to parts unknown.)
> In fact it has been statistically proven that men who have an ongoing
> relationship and visitation are *by far* more likely to pay child
> support.
How about the men who do not keep up their relationships with their
children (by their own choices)? One of the biggest complaints I've
heard (in the problem of 'deadbeat Dads') is that the children want
to see their fathers but the dads don't keep up the visits (along
with not paying court-ordered support.)
> Now you'd think that if payment of child support was the important
> thing you'd see more support to enforce visitation and custody rights
> if that has been proven to help.
When men skip out on court-ordered custody, they've broken the law.
The system isn't looking to find these Dads to give the men a shoulder
to cry on. They want the orders of the court to be obeyed (whether
the guy is happy about it or not.)
Men can take women to court for not allowing proper visitations. The
courts do enfore this part of the judgment, too.
|
822.398 | | CSC32::HADDOCK | Don't Tell My Achy-Breaky Back | Tue Sep 08 1992 18:53 | 27 |
| re .396
>Do you have any stats to show that it's ONLY the fathers who are not
>allowed to visit their kids that skip out on child support payments?
I didn't say that it was _only_ fathers who are not allowed visitation
who skip. I said that statistically proven ( I believe that it was
the census records or something national like that, and NO I am
not going to go look it up for the sake of proof to you ) that
fathers who have visitation and an ongoing relationship are much
more likely to pay child support than fathers who don't. Since
many men who would like to have a relationship with their chidren
are forbidden ( and this practice was supposed to have gone out
with the Emancipation Proclamation ), wouldn't it stand to reason
that one solution to the "child support" problem would be to
support visitation and the ongoing relationship of the non-custodial
parent.
>(My understanding is that a lot of these 'deadbeat Dads' don't have
>visitation BECAUSE they've skipped out to parts unknown.)
Whenever I hear this argument brought up as a reason for _not_
paying support, ie no visitation-no support, (especially in court)
it is immediatly slapped down with "that is a totally separate issue".
fred();
|
822.399 | The stats should show how many dads voluntarily stop the visits... | GORE::CONLON | | Tue Sep 08 1992 19:03 | 34 |
| My friend (who's had the best situation with child support of any woman
I know) has always been perfectly willing and reasonable about her ex's
visits to their son.
Even so, the guy skipped out for 4 or 5 years (without having a single
visit *or* paying a dime in child support all that time.) When he
finally resurfaced, he started paying a bit more than 1/10th the
amount ordered by the court - but my friend didn't complain to the
court about it. She allowed him FULL unlimited visitations again
(he's an airline pilot so he visited the boy whenever he could get a
flight to where they lived, and my friend agreed to ALL visits whether
they fit her schedule or not.)
It wasn't until she was laid off from her job that he started paying
his original child support again (and only because he worried that
she might try to get food stamps to feed his son, which would not
have gone over well for the son of a Captain of a major airline.)
The boy and his Dad have a good relationship now (even though the Dad
missed knowing him from around 2 to 6 years old.) My friend has never
stood in his way even once when it came to this relationship.
Why did the guy skip out for so long (then pay around 1/10th of his
support payments) while making a good living as an airline pilot???
Well, who knows? He and his new wife (and kids) sure do live in the
lap of luxury now, though: Big house, nice boat, private airplane,
etc. I guess my friend's little boy did *without* (his Dad and the
support) to help finance their splendid lifestyle.
Do I regard this Dad as 'deadbeat'? In part, I sure as hell do. He
gave up seeing his son voluntarily while he ditched his support payments
to build a life my friend and her son can only see on "Lifestyles of
the Rich and Famous."
|
822.400 | (I got absolutely zero child support for my own son, BTW.) | GORE::CONLON | | Tue Sep 08 1992 19:09 | 14 |
|
P.S. As I mentioned before, this friend of mine got the best deal I've
ever seen (for child support from a divorce case.)
She got $500 per month (from an airline pilot with a 6-figure income)
and lost it for 5 years without complaining until he restarted the
payments with a whopping $60 per month for the next few years until
she was laid off.
He had unlimited visitation rights every time he contacted her about it.
(I've never known any other woman personally who got a better deal
than this, though. The second biggest settlement among the women
I've known was $70 per month.)
|
822.401 | | CSC32::HADDOCK | Don't Tell My Achy-Breaky Back | Tue Sep 08 1992 19:14 | 15 |
|
re 399
I didn't say visitation was a cure. I said it "helped". I also
reguard that man as a "deadbeat" that helps make it harder on
the rest of us who do care.
However, in your friends case, she went to court and got action.
It was her choice to go or not to go, and when she decided to
go, the court took action.
In cases where the sitation is reversed, I have seen little
or no action out of the court. (Beyond my own case that is).
fred();
|
822.402 | | GORE::CONLON | | Tue Sep 08 1992 19:20 | 21 |
| RE: .401 Fred
> However, in your friends case, she went to court and got action.
> It was her choice to go or not to go, and when she decided to
> go, the court took action.
Nope. She never took him to court (after he skipped out then
returned with the $60 per month payments instead of $500.)
He went back to full child support payments on his own (out of fear
that she would try to get food stamps if he didn't restore the
original payments after she was laid off from her job.)
During one of his visits, she had the food stamps application on
the table (and remarked something like, "They didn't ask much about
me, but they wanted to know EVERYTHING about you.") He restored
the payments immediately and she never applied for food stamps,
although she was probably still eligible for them. She worried
that he would stop the payments again after she got a job some
months later, but he's kept the payments up to the court-ordered
level since restoring it back then.
|
822.403 | | CSC32::HADDOCK | Don't Tell My Achy-Breaky Back | Tue Sep 08 1992 19:24 | 20 |
| re .400
>(I've never known any other woman personally who got a better deal
>than this, though. The second biggest settlement among the women
>I've known was $70 per month.)
I support men paying a _reasonable_ amount of child support.
Apparently you haven't looked at the _mandatory_ "child support"
"guidelines" lately. I know some men who are paying in _excess_
of $250 per _week_. Take a look at your own paycheck and see
what kind of dent _that_ would make. Then go to visit your
child and have the door slammed (literally) in you face. Then
you come and talk to me about "deadbeat dads'.
If given the choice of 1) starve, 2) cut-and-run, which would you
do? I know what my ex-wife did, and her support wasn't even
close to what I'd had to pay. Men aren't the only "deadbeats".
fred();
|
822.404 | You're _still_ helping to prove the point | CSC32::HADDOCK | Don't Tell My Achy-Breaky Back | Tue Sep 08 1992 19:29 | 8 |
| re .402
>During one of his visits, she had the food stamps application on
>the table (and remarked something like, "They didn't ask much about
>me, but they wanted to know EVERYTHING about you.") He restored
The point is _still_ she has some choices and leverage. He doesn't.
fred();
|
822.405 | | GORE::CONLON | | Tue Sep 08 1992 19:33 | 17 |
| RE: .404 Fred
> The point is _still_ she has some choices and leverage. He doesn't.
She only had the leverage of threatening him with Food Stamps when
she'd totally lost her job. Up to then, as long as she was totally
self-supporting (without his payments,) she couldn't afford to hire
a lawyer (or a private detective) to track him down. He changed
airlines when he cut out and she didn't know where he was (or where
he was working) anymore. Even after he came back, she still didn't
have the money to hire a lawyer to get the payments restored.
She had to hit rock bottom before she had any clout at all.
So much for her great leverage. She just had a son to raise while his
Dad had the choice to start a new family with all the luxuries they
could ever want.
|
822.406 | give me a lever long enough.... | CSC32::HADDOCK | Don't Tell My Achy-Breaky Back | Tue Sep 08 1992 19:39 | 12 |
| re .405
>She only had the leverage of threatening him with Food Stamps when
>she'd totally lost her job. Up to then, as long as she was totally
That's a pretty big lever. He probably knew that if she applied
for food stamps, then Social Services would go after him (free
of charge to her and very expensive for him to provide his own
lawyer) for a _lot_ more than what he was currently ordered to pay,
_and_ have it garnished from his paycheck.
fred();
|
822.407 | | HDLITE::ZARLENGA | Michael Zarlenga, Alpha P/PEG | Tue Sep 08 1992 20:21 | 5 |
| Fred, fred, fred ...
What makes you think you can carry on an honest conversation with
someone who refuses to acknowledge when they are caught, red-handed,
making up disparaging comments about the men here?
|
822.408 | how silly can we get???? | FORTSC::WILDE | why am I not yet a dragon? | Tue Sep 08 1992 20:36 | 27 |
| > Way back somewhere I asked wheather or not women should be allowed
> to shirk _their_ financial responsibility by remaining on welfare
> because it paid more or was more convient than what they could find
> otherwise. Nobody bothered to answer that question either.
> I don't think it's just men who are shirking thier responsibility
> (financial and otherwise) to the unintended results of sex. It's
> just more _politically corret_ for women to do so.
fred(),
if a woman gets a job that pays LESS than welfare, how does that benefit
the child in any concrete fashion other than to set a good example? While
it is wonderful to set good examples, they don't feed/clothe/shelter a
child. A woman with a child must make decisions that provide the best
option possible for the child. For that matter, I don't see how a woman
taking a job that pays less than welfare would benefit the man responsible
for child support - he'd have to pay more, wouldn't he?
THE BOTTOM LINE IS THE CHILD'S WELFARE - NOT PUNISHING THE MOTHER FOR
GETTING PREGNANT OR FOR GETTING DIVORCED.
sheesh!!! how hard is it to understand this? Children are involved in this
discussion - real live children who have the same needs whether a
man wants to pay for them or not.
|
822.409 | a hearing??? | FORTSC::WILDE | why am I not yet a dragon? | Tue Sep 08 1992 20:51 | 34 |
|
> BECAUSE THEY TRUST A WOMAN!
> If she changes her mind or chooses to be irresponsible...
> Believe me, men are changing their behavior to avoid this problem. In
> past years a woman would avoid the "taboo" of illegitamacy but today it
> seems more "permissable", especially when "men get woman pregnant" and
> she can get the DOR to chase down the supposed "DEAD BEAT DAD".
AND SHE TRUSTS HER BIRTH CONTROL...and it isn't perfect and babies occur.
Now, if that happens, you want the woman to face a "hearing" to determine
if she really meant to get pregnant? I'm sorry to be so dense, but how
in the hell do you suppose a court would determine that? He says she
intended to get pregnant because she did get pregnant and she says she
was using birth control and it failed - now what? do you automatically
believe the man because he says so - or do you believe the woman because
she says so? What if she has the used spermicide tube and the diaphragm
to prove that she has birth control? What if she can show that she can't
use the pill, but was trying to use the "natural method" and it failed?
And even if she does get self-reliant, why the hell should the court
decide that the man wouldn't be responsible to provide aid to the child
on the premise that MORE money for education (as an example) would certainly
benefit the child - after all, private schools do a better job of education
than public schools?
Look, if there was anyway to discourage people from having sex without
first getting to know your partner and determining that he/she has the
same values and believes the same things about pregnancy and abortion, etc.,
there would be far fewer people on this planet - some of US wouldn't be
here. No, it would NOT discourage women from choosing the wrong partner
any more than it discourages men from choosing the wrong partner to be
faced with years of child support. People choose partners by the glands,
my friend, not their brains....and that is a problem that BOTH genders
cause, not just women...not by a long shot.
|
822.410 | | LAVETA::CONLON | | Tue Sep 08 1992 21:02 | 33 |
| RE: .406 Fred
>> She only had the leverage of threatening him with Food Stamps when
>> she'd totally lost her job. Up to then, as long as she was totally
> That's a pretty big lever. He probably knew that if she applied
> for food stamps, then Social Services would go after him (free
> of charge to her and very expensive for him to provide his own
> lawyer) for a _lot_ more than what he was currently ordered to pay,
> _and_ have it garnished from his paycheck.
You're mistaken. *She* never wanted to go to court (because she
knew that even if she got a few bucks to get a lawyer, he had enough
money to get his payments made smaller *OR WORSE* to take custody
away from her entirely.
When it came to the Food Stamps, he was afraid that the Food Stamps
folks would contact his employer (a major airline - he was a pilot/
Captain, remember?) The airline was very conservative about family
stuff, so he hadn't bothered to tell them he was divorced and
remarried. He was worried that the airline would find out he'd lied
to them about his family status.
The Food Stamps folks couldn't have gotten involved in her child
support case. The divorce (and all subsequent child support payments)
occurred in Colorado. She was living in California when she almost
applied for Food Stamps (and he was living in some posh area in
New Jersey or New York at the time.)
Today, she lives in Seattle (near her family) and he still lives in
the same area (New Jersey or New York,) and he still mails his
payments to Colorado (then they send her a check after they receive
his.)
|
822.411 | Read notes .389, .390 and .393 (and weep!) | LAVETA::CONLON | | Tue Sep 08 1992 21:05 | 11 |
| RE: .407 Mike Z.
> What makes you think you can carry on an honest conversation with
> someone who refuses to acknowledge when they are caught, red-handed,
> making up disparaging comments about the men here?
Since you falsely accused me of claiming that some men here want men
to have zero required responsibilities for unplanned pregnancy, one
honest man has admitted that this is (indeed) what he wants.
Read it and weep, pal.
|
822.412 | It didn't take you long to turn this guy into a victim... | GORE::CONLON | | Tue Sep 08 1992 22:13 | 22 |
| By the way, Fred...
Notice how little time it took you to turn this 6-figure-income
airline pilot (who skipped out on his visits and his payments
for 5 years, then started paying a bit over 1/10th of his
payment in exchange for unlimited visitation privileges) into
the poor victim of this situation.
While my friend and her son faced the possibility of getting
Food Stamps to have enough to eat, I bet this poor ex-husband
probably had to cut back on the amount of fuel for his plane
for awhile (until he made the proper adjustments in his budget.)
Yet, he's now the poor victim of a system that gives all the power
to his ex-wife. What a joke!
Now I see how some of these stories about poor, downtrodden divorced
men get started. No matter how much money they make (and even if
they skip out on child support payments to fund a VERY affluent
lifestyle,) they quickly become victims.
Thanks for showing me how it works.
|
822.413 | | IAMOK::KATZ | Language is a Virus | Tue Sep 08 1992 22:18 | 30 |
| > There are _many_ of us who do not
> believe in abortion and would take the child and raise it on our own
> if need be rather than see our children buchered.
> BUT WE'RE NOT GIVEN THAT CHOICE!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!11
Fred, do you believe that a single man's opinion as to whether or not
an abortion "butchers" his child is more important than a single
woman's decision as to what will happen with her most private
possession -- her own body?
The male partner's limited biological role (ie: after fertilization,
there is no implicit or required role for the development of a
potential child) means he should have a say in the woman's control of
her body?
I said before (way back...it was ignored apparently) that it would be
ideal for people to know and care about each other enough so that they
could come to some understanding when unexpected or unwanted
pregnancies occurred. But this is the real world. How do you get
around that issue? How, in this particular circumstance (ie: unplanned
pregnancy, woman decides to abort, man doesn't want her to) can you
reconcile your desire without squashing the woman's right to control
her body?
I don't see any way around it without resorting to the "pre-conjugal
agreements" I mentioned earlier.
--------->daniel
|
822.414 | | IAMOK::KATZ | Language is a Virus | Tue Sep 08 1992 22:24 | 10 |
| p.s. a lot of this problem would become academic if there were a
*real* commitment to family planning and access to birth control
methods on a much wider scale. A lot of improtant information about
pregnancy and family planning options is blocked by religious
organizations.
People who use TWO 90% effective methods of B.C. go a long way to
reducing those odds of having to deal with these conflicts.
-------->d
|
822.415 | this is strike two... one more and you're out... | HDLITE::ZARLENGA | Michael Zarlenga, Alpha P/PEG | Tue Sep 08 1992 23:12 | 6 |
| .411> RE: .407 Mike Z.
.411> Since you falsely accused me of claiming that some men here want men
.411> to have zero required responsibilities for unplanned pregnancy, one
.411> honest man has admitted that this is (indeed) what he wants.
Really?! That's simply amazing! Where did I say that ...?
|
822.416 | sad | FORTSC::WILDE | why am I not yet a dragon? | Tue Sep 08 1992 23:28 | 28 |
|
> People who use TWO 90% effective methods of B.C. go a long way to
> reducing those odds of having to deal with these conflicts.
Yes, and several of us in this stream of notes have mentioned it...but,
for the more vocal male members of this stream, the real agenda seems
to be to bolster their feelings of "betrayed outrage" at the idea that
they might be held accountable for child support should pregnancy
occur. They have no interest in hearing that birth control isn't
perfect, they have no interest in hearing that women might have real
moral problems with aborting a pregnancy should it occur, and they
sure don't care about the pain that putting a child up for adoption
might cause the woman...they are busy casting themselves as victims...
and they want the women who victimize them punished. I am suprised
at the level of hostility towards women that has been expressed here -
and being a woman, I must admit relief that I'm not involved with any
of these angry men....of course, they are equally glad they don't
have to deal with someone like me who insists that these issues be
faced BEFORE there is any CHANCE of pregnancy - and who wouldn't
have sex with a man unless he was using BC (as in: comdom) too. I
wouldn't care if he liked it or not - at least he wouldn't end up having
to support a child he didn't want...and I wouldn't be faced with
trying to support a child alone.
Unfortunately, only the chidren end up punished in any of the scenarios
mentioned. Many men seem unwilling or unable to look past their
relationship, or lack of one, with the woman and focus on the needs
of the child.
|
822.417 | | GORE::CONLON | | Tue Sep 08 1992 23:37 | 24 |
| RE: .415 Mike Z.
Worded a bit better, you falsely accused me of claiming falsely that
some men want to have zero required responsibilities for unplanned
pregnancy...
I'd furnish you with a more complete list of your false accusations,
but only one is needed here:
.344> As I suspected. No one said it, it was a fabrication.
.344> Please refrain from distorting the truth to make false points.
It was not a fabrication to say that some men here seem to believe
that men should have zero required responsibilities for unplanned
pregnancies. In notes .389, .390 and .393, please see where one
honest man admitted that this is what he wants.
As for others here, I've asked repeatedly for someone to cite the
required responsibilities in unplanned pregnancies that would remain
if men were absolved of all required responsibilites (and no one has
been able to cite these responsibilities yet.) So my observation
still stands.
You can tap dance around this all you like (and I'm sure you will.)
|
822.418 | | HDLITE::ZARLENGA | Michael Zarlenga, Alpha P/PEG | Wed Sep 09 1992 01:21 | 16 |
| .417> Worded a bit better, you falsely accused me of claiming falsely that
.417> some men want to have zero required responsibilities for unplanned
.417> pregnancy...
Thank you. Now we all know the claim in .411 is false.
In .338, you admitted the claim in .335 was false.
So that's twice now that you've been caught in the act.
Why are you doing this?
Is in intentional or accidental?
Can we expect this to stop sometime soon?
|
822.419 | | GORE::CONLON | | Wed Sep 09 1992 01:43 | 38 |
| RE: .418 Mike Z.
.417> Worded a bit better, you falsely accused me of claiming falsely that
.417> some men want to have zero required responsibilities for unplanned
.417> pregnancy...
> Thank you. Now we all know the claim in .411 is false.
The sentence in .411 contained a typo (which was corrected in .417).
Aren't you bright enough to understand this, or are you just lying
about it?
> In .338, you admitted the claim in .335 was false.
Now, this is a blatant lie. I stated that I *hoped* no one here
believed that men should have zero required responsibility for
unplanned pregnancy (and it was a hope stated in the face of much
evidence to the contrary.) I'm an optimist. :>
> So that's twice now that you've been caught in the act.
Nope. It's twice that you've made desperate attempts to distract
the discussion with deliberately false claims.
> Why are you doing this?
I'm trying to have a discussion with you (in spite of dead certain
knowledge of the futility of such a gesture.) Again, I'm an
optimist.
> Is in intentional or accidental?
Attempting discussion with you is intentional. (I should put this
in a "True Confessions" note somewhere, though.) :>
> Can we expect this to stop sometime soon?
Your games? I doubt it.
|
822.420 | | GORE::CONLON | | Wed Sep 09 1992 09:58 | 49 |
| Before this discussion gets side-tracked a whole lot further...
When folks suggest that it would be more 'equal' if men could walk
away from an unplanned pregnancy because women have options like
abortion and adoption, the problem is that it results in a very
unequal situation (where women, taxpayers, and society in general
bear the burdens for the results of some of men's sexual activities.)
It's true that men have no control over whether or not a child will
be born as the result of an unplanned pregnancy. Women also have
no control over whether or not birth control will fail (nor whether
or not the pregnancy will result in a miscarriage, nor whether the
man will respond to the pregnancy with full emotional support or
"Die, bitch! You did this on purpose, I hope you rot in hell.")
Women face health risks (and body changes) as well as possible/likely
poverty (in some cases) if becoming a single parent.
When I was a teenager, people said (about unwed expectant mothers)
- "She went and got herself pregnant" (as if she was the only one,
of the two parents, in trouble.) Boys/men typically took the
attitude of "Well, it's her body so it's HER responsibility to
prevent pregnancy, not mine" (so most times, they didn't even ASK
the woman if she was using any sort of protection.) They simply
didn't care that much about it.
People who view men and women in a traditional sense *AND* people
who view men and women as equal seem to agree (for the most part)
that men need to take more responsibility in this area. Traditional
groups view men as breadwinners (and want them to support their
children.) Others view men and women BOTH as potential/probable
breadwinners (but still want men to share the financial burden of
child-raising for their offspring.)
If men took more responsibility for birth control (along with women
so that BOTH PARTNERS were using their own protection,) the problem
of unplanned pregnancy could be greatly reduced!!! For some reason,
many men do not wish to start a new sexual revolution of sexual
responsibility for birth control (so the problems continue.)
Absolving men of all required responsibility for unplanned pregnancy
is an attractive solution for some men (so they'd never again have to
worry about where they planted their seed) - but it's not the answer
for a society already burdened with a huge number of abortions,
unplanned births, and children being supported by Welfare.
Men have the opportunity to change this (for their own sakes as well
as anyone else's,) but as we can see in this topic, it's something
that most men simply don't want to do.
|
822.421 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Wed Sep 09 1992 10:05 | 7 |
| You know, folks, 420 entries on one subject, with the refrain of "Yes it is!
No it isn't!" is getting rather tiring. It doesn't seem that anyone's mind
is going to be changed by what's going on here between a few noters.
Perhaps it would be best to move on to something else.
Steve (as moderator)
|
822.422 | | CSC32::M_EVANS | hate is not a family value | Wed Sep 09 1992 10:36 | 12 |
| Steve,
I would still like to know what men think that men's responsibility in
an unplanned (and unwanted) pregnancy resulting in a child should be?
I would also like to know why there is so much hostility around men
also taking some responsibility for birth control, instead of laying
all responsibility on a woman.
I guess I am confused, and would like some clarity here.
Meg
|
822.423 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Wed Sep 09 1992 11:08 | 8 |
| Re: .422
You'll never find out here. You'll only find what certain men think - trying
to extrapolate that to "men" in general is risky. What is clear to me is
that there is a wide range of opinion, and it's best to take up the
question with the specific individuals whose response is important to you.
Steve
|
822.424 | Your using this as an example is bogus | CSC32::HADDOCK | Don't Tell My Achy-Breaky Back | Wed Sep 09 1992 11:25 | 39 |
| re .410
>You're mistaken. *She* never wanted to go to court (because she
>knew that even if she got a few bucks to get a lawyer, he had enough
>money to get his payments made smaller *OR WORSE* to take custody
>away from her entirely.
Which only goes to prove the point. She _chose_ not to go to court.
If she _chose_ not to avail herself of the remidies available, then
it is not my problem. Nor anyone elses for that matter.
The only person that she is the victim of is herself. The only real
victim is the child, and he's as much a victim of her as he is
of he is of him.
From your last few entries, I'm beginning to wonder just how much
you really know about the _current_ system, and how much of your
intent is just to perpetuate the _victim_ myth.
Case in point.
>The Food Stamps folks couldn't have gotten involved in her child
>support case. The divorce (and all subsequent child support payments)
>occurred in Colorado. She was living in California when she almost
>applied for Food Stamps (and he was living in some posh area in
>New Jersey or New York at the time.)
Social Services is bound *by law* to go after the child support when
a custodial parent applies for help. The support is used to offset
the support paid by the state. That's why more and more states,
and now the federal government, are so interested in child support
collections and not interested at all in visitation/custody issues.
Not because of "the poor little children", but because one helps
free up funds for other pork-barrel projects while the other is
just a pain. If these legislators and congressmen were really
interested in the child, they would be more interested in
visitation/custody issues as well. Especially when parents who
have an ongoing relationship with their child are more likely
to voluntarily pay the child support.
fred();
|
822.425 | What _choice_ is really being made? | CSC32::HADDOCK | Don't Tell My Achy-Breaky Back | Wed Sep 09 1992 11:43 | 30 |
| re .413
>Fred, do you believe that a single man's opinion as to whether or not
>an abortion "butchers" his child is more important than a single
>woman's decision as to what will happen with her most private
>possession -- her own body?
I wonder how many of these decisions to "abort" are made on the basis
of "do I want the responsibility of raising and supporting a child"
rather on the basis of "what happens to my body during pregnency"?
Probably no way to tell, really. It's probably not all one way
or the other. This question brings the whole situation back directly
in line of whether or not men and women have equal choices. The
woman is allowed to "abort" simply because she does not want the
responsibility, not necessarily because "bad" things may happen to
her body during pregnency. There is no such decision available
to the male.
In how many of these cases could the child have been given in
adoption to loving and caring parents? In how many of these cases
(there's more than you might think) would the father have been
willing to take the child and raise it? Or is it better (or is
it just more convienent) to just grind the kid up in the garbage
disposal.
But as I said before I tend to be on the totally opposite end of
this discussion. I don't believe that _either_ men _or_ women
are facing up to the responsibility of their actions.
fred();
|
822.426 | | GORE::CONLON | | Wed Sep 09 1992 11:46 | 61 |
| RE: .424 Fred
>> ...even if she got a few bucks to get a lawyer...[She never did
>> get the bucks, though.]
> Which only goes to prove the point. She _chose_ not to go to court.
She didn't have the choice of being able to afford a lawyer, Fred,
nor did she have a choice in knowing that any lawyer she COULD
afford would not be as powerful as the one her ex could get with
all this money (if she dared go up against him in court.)
> If she _chose_ not to avail herself of the remidies available, then
> it is not my problem. Nor anyone elses for that matter.
> The only person that she is the victim of is herself. The only
> real victim is the child, and he's as much a victim of her as he
> is of he is of him. [???]
But the deadbeat Dad in this case is innocent, right? He had
unlimited visitation and chose to take off (leaving his kid without
his support while knowing that his ex-wife didn't have the resources
to do a damn thing about it!!!) What a guy, huh? He won.
> From your last few entries, I'm beginning to wonder just how much
> you really know about the _current_ system, and how much of your
> intent is just to perpetuate the _victim_ myth.
Well, I can see that you think the woman is all-powerful (with all
the resources in the world at her disposal, with all possible decisions
going her way if she merely snaps her finger.) What a load of crap!!!
My friend was lucky the Dad ever turned up (and she knows it.) If
he'd gone for good, she wouldn't have been able to do a thing about
it. She was self-supporting, so no Welfare agency would have paid
detectives or lawyers to nail this guy. If she'd had to go on Food
Stamps, it's possible (but the state of California would have gone
after him for THEMSELVES with no regard at all for her divorce
agreement in Colorado.)
> Social Services is bound *by law* to go after the child support when
> a custodial parent applies for help. The support is used to offset
> the support paid by the state.
They would have gone after him for the FOOD STAMP money only. Her
divorce agreement was in Colorado, so California would have done
NOTHING to change this agreement (the way you suggested earlier.)
> Especially when parents who
> have an ongoing relationship with their child are more likely
> to voluntarily pay the child support
In my friend's case, he abandoned his child (YES, HE ABANDONED HIS
CHILD! HE WAS A DEADBEAT DAD!) in order to avoid paying the money he
owed for child support. His income was 6-figures, but he didn't want
to pay $500 per month to help his child, so he didn't see the kid for
5 years. (So much for the ongoing relationship theory.)
Meanwhile, you still seem to think this guy was doing ok (and that
the child's mother was at fault for what happened.) It only proves
to me that most of these so-called cases of victimized Dads is a lot
of biased nonsense.
|
822.427 | still trying, eh | CSC32::HADDOCK | Don't Tell My Achy-Breaky Back | Wed Sep 09 1992 11:53 | 25 |
| re .426
>She didn't have the choice of being able to afford a lawyer, Fred,
>nor did she have a choice in knowing that any lawyer she COULD
>afford would not be as powerful as the one her ex could get with
>all this money (if she dared go up against him in court.)
If she were really unable to afford a lawyer, there are organizations
that will represent her "pro bono" (for free). I know, because
one of them represented my ex while I went without.
This argument too brings up the question about how much you really
know about the current system because this argument too is bogus.
>But the deadbeat Dad in this case is innocent, right? He had
>unlimited visitation and chose to take off (leaving his kid without
>his support while knowing that his ex-wife didn't have the resources
>to do a damn thing about it!!!) What a guy, huh? He won.
I stated before ( and you have so conviently ignored ) that I did not
have much respect for _him_ either. It's guys like him that makes
it harder on those of us who _do_ care. However, there _were_
remidies available to her that she _chose_ not to avail herself.
fred();
|
822.428 | | PCCAD::DINGELDEIN | PHOENIX | Wed Sep 09 1992 11:56 | 24 |
| For the record, My intetnt is to avoid bringing children into the world
that do not have the committment of both parents. Unwanted pregnancy
doesn't equate to unwanted children unless you beleive terminating
pregnancy in the early stages is "murder".
I've stated my views over and over and I find it amazing how some
people can take bits and pieces out of context and then attempt an
argument by re-constucting my words to validate their own personal
views.
Presently men have no recourse after conception, woman do. The
"pre-sex" contract" seems the only answer (only if the courts and state
will honor them). At least people will have more reason to think about
the potential consequences of sex and the potential responsibilities
beyond sexual gratification.
I do resent some of the attempts to paint me as some irresponsible,
un-caring, insensitive creature from the "patriarchial lagoon". But I
am willing to expose myself to this abuse for the sake of potential
healthy argument and disscusion.
We all share the human experience, men, woman and children. I would
just like to see a more equitable balance between all parties instead
of this "victim mentality" that's pitting us against each other.
|
822.429 | | GORE::CONLON | | Wed Sep 09 1992 11:57 | 41 |
| RE: .427 Fred
> If she were really unable to afford a lawyer, there are organizations
> that will represent her "pro bono" (for free). I know, because
> one of them represented my ex while I went without.
Your ex's free lawyer lost the case, though, remember? My friend
didn't know about any free lawyers, but she did know that her ex
could afford the best (and would beat her in court no matter what
she did.)
> This argument too brings up the question about how much you really
> know about the current system because this argument too is bogus.
I'm telling you my friend's real experience with child support over
the years I've known her (and I've heard about her situation step
by step, as it happened.)
Her experience proves to me that this idea about women being totally
all-powerful in these situations is a bunch of crap. She was at the
mercy of her ex's willingness to return to her son's life (with some
amount of child support.) She knew (and HE KNEW) that she couldn't
do a thing about his 'skipping out' for 5 years.
> I stated befor ( and you have so conviently ignored ) that I did not
> have much respect for _him_ either. It's guys like him that makes
> it harder on those of us who _do_ care.
Why don't you have much respect for her, though????? She supported
that child through thick and thin (doing the best she could under
the circumstances.) She NEVER ONCE denied the Dad visitation. She
never asked for anything unreasonable (she only wanted the relatively
small amount of money he was ordered by the court to pay for child
support after the divorce.)
She didn't go to court because she didn't have the money (and didn't
know of any free lawyers) and because she feared she would lose the
child if the dad got mad enough (about going to court) to get the
best possible lawyer and go for custody.
So what did she do wrong in your eyes (besides having a uterus)?????
|
822.430 | | CSC32::HADDOCK | Don't Tell My Achy-Breaky Back | Wed Sep 09 1992 11:59 | 11 |
| re .407
I know, Mike, sometimes I feel like the perverbial voice crying
in the wilderness. I just hope that some of the other readers
of this confrence and understand and see what is _really_ happening
and not be sucked into all the "feminist" retoric.
I still think this note makes a better example of the point being
made than it does an argument against the point.
fred();
|
822.431 | | GORE::CONLON | | Wed Sep 09 1992 12:01 | 19 |
| RE: .427 Fred
Since you added this...
> However, there _were_ remidies available to her that she _chose_ not
> to avail herself.
She didn't know about any free lawyers (but I doubt she would have
felt safe to use them even if she did.) She knew that her ex could
afford the best (money would not have been a problem for him with
his income.)
How do you think he got off (from the divorce) with only paying $500
per month although his income was in the 6-figure range??? She knew
she didn't have a prayer in court with him and his capacity to get
high-priced lawyers.
A free lawyer isn't much of an answer in a situation like that. It
certainly didn't help your ex-wife any.
|
822.432 | | GORE::CONLON | | Wed Sep 09 1992 12:08 | 17 |
| RE: .430 Fred
> I just hope that some of the other readers
> of this confrence and understand and see what is _really_ happening
> and not be sucked into all the "feminist" retoric.
Most intelligent noters don't fall for such 'labeling' tactics, Fred.
We've been talking about a real case (a real situation) and you've
shown that the woman is damned no matter what she does (while the
deadbeat dad is no worse than the Mom who held the fort without
his help for 5 years.)
> I still think this note makes a better example of the point being
> made than it does an argument against the point.
Wishing won't make it so.
|
822.433 | | CSC32::HADDOCK | Don't Tell My Achy-Breaky Back | Wed Sep 09 1992 12:09 | 36 |
| re .429
>Your ex's free lawyer lost the case, though, remember? My friend
>didn't know about any free lawyers, but she did know that her ex
>could afford the best (and would beat her in court no matter what
>she did.)
No. My ex's lawyer won the case. Twice. I only won because the
third time she made some _major_ screw ups and because I didn't
have a lawyer to tell me different, I was able to capitalize on.
>I'm telling you my friend's real experience with child support over
>the years I've known her (and I've heard about her situation step
>by step, as it happened.)
>
>Her experience proves to me that this idea about women being totally
>all-powerful in these situations is a bunch of crap. She was at the
>mercy of her ex's willingness to return to her son's life (with some
>amount of child support.) She knew (and HE KNEW) that she couldn't
>do a thing about his 'skipping out' for 5 years.
And I'm telling you that this particular example is bogus. She
_had_ remidies available and _she_ _chose_ not to take advantage
of them.
> Why don't you have much respect for her, though????? She supported
Because by perpetuating herself as a victim, she also victimized her
son. However, I do respect the fact that she continued to _allow_
visitation. Again it was her choice, because there wasn't much the
father could have done if she had blocked the visitation. I assure
you that in this behavior, however, she is in the minority. The
majority would have further victimized their child by cutting off
the visitation also.
fred();
|
822.434 | | CSC32::HADDOCK | Don't Tell My Achy-Breaky Back | Wed Sep 09 1992 12:14 | 21 |
| re .431
> She didn't know about any free lawyers (but I doubt she would have
> felt safe to use them even if she did.) She knew that her ex could
> afford the best (money would not have been a problem for him with
> his income.)
And whose problem is _that_.
> A free lawyer isn't much of an answer in a situation like that. It
> certainly didn't help your ex-wife any.
A free lawyer beats the *&^% out of what _I_ had. I couldn't
get representation because the only pro bono servaice was already
representing _her_. And yes the _did_ do her a lot of good.
It was only on the third try and because she screwed up that I
finally got custody.
fred();
|
822.435 | | CSC32::HADDOCK | Don't Tell My Achy-Breaky Back | Wed Sep 09 1992 12:17 | 14 |
| re 432.
> Most intelligent noters don't fall for such 'labeling' tactics, Fred.
I sure hope so. But then "intelligent noter" may be an oxymoron. ;^)
> We've been talking about a real case (a real situation) and you've
> shown that the woman is damned no matter what she does (while the
> deadbeat dad is no worse than the Mom who held the fort without
> his help for 5 years.)
No, I'm just showing that this particular "example" is bogus.
fred()
|
822.436 | | GORE::CONLON | | Wed Sep 09 1992 12:21 | 43 |
| RE: .433 Fred
> And I'm telling you that this particular example is bogus. She
> _had_ remidies available and _she_ _chose_ not to take advantage
> of them.
It's bogus to you because she doesn't fit into your stereotype of
the evil, vicious Mom who lives to bring destruction to her ex.
She only wanted to raise her son with the support promised to her
by the court. She worked for all the rest of the money used to
support him (which meant that she did FAR, FAR, FAR more of the
financial support for her son than her ex-husband ever did.)
> Because by perpetuating herself as a victim, she also victimized her
> son.
This is an absolute, vicious lie. She did the best she could under
difficult circumstances. She didn't victimize ANYONE (including
herself!) She simply carried on (in the best way she could) to
raise the boy by herself.
> However, I do respect the fact that she continued to _allow_
> visitation. Again it was her choice, because there wasn't much the
> father could have done if she had blocked the visitation.
She wanted him to have a relationship with his son, but if she
hadn't wanted it, HE HAD THE MONEY TO HIRE LAWYERS TO SUE FOR CUSTODY.
She knew he had the power in this situation and that she was lucky he
only skipped out for 5 years (and didn't do other things that could
have been much worse.)
> I assure you that in this behavior, however, she is in the minority.
I don't believe you. This friend has had the best deal in child
support of anyone I've ever personally known. I've NEVER known a
woman who had all sorts of power over an ex-husband (or got lots
of money) after a divorce. NEVER!
> The majority would have further victimized their child by cutting off
> the visitation also.
Oh yeah, I forgot. The woman is evil and guilty no matter what. Women
are just such scum to you, right Fred? We'll probably all rot in hell.
|
822.437 | | GORE::CONLON | | Wed Sep 09 1992 12:28 | 17 |
| RE: .435 Fred
> No, I'm just showing that this particular "example" is bogus.
Well, I won't tell my friend that you think her life is bogus (the
next time I call her in Seattle.) Not that she'd lose any sleep
over it.
She simply doesn't fit into your idea of the evil, vicious Mom who
should rot in hell. She's a very nice woman who has done a wonderful
job of raising her son (mostly by herself) so far.
If she should rot in hell for not knowing she could get a free lawyer
in Colorado (while living in California,) then I guess (from your
perspective) she *should* rot in hell (OR WHATEVER.)
Your ideas about bogus examples are a bunch of crap.
|
822.438 | :-) | DELNI::STHILAIRE | makes ya stop & wonder why | Wed Sep 09 1992 12:29 | 2 |
| bla-bla-bla
|
822.439 | furthermore | DELNI::STHILAIRE | makes ya stop & wonder why | Wed Sep 09 1992 12:35 | 15 |
| re .428, I will add to that bla-bla-bla, however, that, in regard to
your comment that you don't think children should be brought into the
world without the the "commitment of both parents" that IF I had a job
earning - say - $85K a year, and if I wanted to have a child, on my
own, I don't think it would be any of your business! If I could afford
to raise the child, including daycare, and everything else, then I
don't see where it's anyone else's business that I would be the only
parent.
(Since I don't make $85K a year, and don't even want another child,
this is academic, but still, if it were the case, I'd be really angry
at your attitude.)
Lorna
|
822.440 | | CSC32::HADDOCK | Don't Tell My Achy-Breaky Back | Wed Sep 09 1992 12:41 | 12 |
|
Suzanne,
Your last two entries have finally pounded it throught my thick
skull that you are going to cling to your idiology no matter what
evidence is presented. I now conclude that Mike is correct and
any further discussion is futile.
Time to agree to disagree.
fred();
|
822.441 | | HDLITE::ZARLENGA | Michael Zarlenga, Alpha P/PEG | Wed Sep 09 1992 12:43 | 14 |
| .420> or not the pregnancy will result in a miscarriage, nor whether the
.420> man will respond to the pregnancy with full emotional support or
.420> "Die, bitch! You did this on purpose, I hope you rot in hell.")
Here were have a strawman, pulled out of thin air and propped up high
for all all to see ... rather than ask you who said this, and sit through
another convoluted denial, I'll save you the time ... no men here said
this.
.420> Absolving men of all required responsibility for unplanned pregnancy
.420> is an attractive solution for some men (so they'd never again have to
And that's a second strawman.
|
822.442 | Life in a Vacum? | PCCAD::DINGELDEIN | PHOENIX | Wed Sep 09 1992 12:47 | 6 |
| Lorna,
Individual autonomy is fine as long as it's "individual".
Where do you propose to aquire the "sperm" for your child. A sperm
bank?
And if you fall on hard times are you going to entertain some lawyers
idea that you can sue for $50k back support if he can have 10%?
|
822.443 | | GORE::CONLON | | Wed Sep 09 1992 12:50 | 38 |
| RE: .440 Fred
> Your last two entries have finally pounded it throught my thick
> skull that you are going to cling to your idiology no matter what
> evidence is presented.
Fred, what "evidence" did you bring to discount my friend's child
support situation? (Calling her case 'bogus' isn't evidence, pal.)
I'm not operating from any ideology about her case. I know what's
been happening to her and I'm recounting it here. You can't change
the facts of her situation simply because it doesn't fit into your
"women are evil" stereotype.
She did the best she could. She didn't victimize her son or herself.
She's raised the boy in the best way she could (and has allowed the
former deadbeat dad to return to his son's life.) She doesn't even
cut down the dad in front of the boy. She has supported their
relationship from square one (and held the possibility open for a
resumed father-son relationship in case the guy ever did come back,
which he did.)
> I now conclude that Mike is correct and any further discussion is futile.
Of course we were bound to disagree about all this. Did you think
I would call my own friend's situation 'bogus' simply because YOU
think it is? (Not a chance!) I know her and I admire her for
things she's done for her son.
I also know she's lucky to have gotten the support she did get. In my
case, I raised a son without ever getting a penny from his Dad (and I
also allowed unlimited visitation in spite of the lack of support.)
> Time to agree to disagree.
Of course. We'll never agree about this. We each (even women) have
the right to our own opinions about all this. No one is forced to
change their opinions for someone else in notes.
|
822.444 | | GORE::CONLON | | Wed Sep 09 1992 12:59 | 18 |
| RE: .441 Mike Z.
.420> "Die, bitch! You did this on purpose, I hope you rot in hell.")
> ...no men here said this.
I never claimed anyone here said this, so don't bother starting up with
this game (yet again.)
.420> Absolving men of all required responsibility for unplanned pregnancy
.420> is an attractive solution for some men (so they'd never again have to
> And that's a second strawman.
Some men (in the world) *do* want to be resolved of all required
responsibility (and at least one honest man here has admitted this.)
So - your games do continue. Of course.
|
822.445 | Note temporarily write-locked | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Wed Sep 09 1992 13:40 | 5 |
| Gee, I had hopes this morning that people would cool off on their own, but
it seems not to be. I've write-locked this note and will leave it that way
for a few days.
Steve
|