If you do some research, 50% of pregnancies are unplanned.
Shit happens. If you're man, and you don't have to take any responsibilities, you don't have to think about complications, you don't have to think about c-section or natural birth, what to eat during pregnancy, what to do with that job you really need, how to afford a baby, what happens to your entire life if you're not able to get an abortion. Your entire life, that's what a pregnancy is in real life.
It's not something you draw up on a piece of paper and go, oh, just give the baby up for adoption. Just use protection. Just don't have sex so often.
Things look perfect on paper but it's never easy in real life. I don't mind men discussing abortion issues, but at a certain point you need to step back and think that you're talking about something you never have to endure, an extremely difficult choice that you'll only have to make on paper while others have to live through, so bringing up things like responsibilities is just a little too hypocritical. As for men wanting the child but the woman doesn't. Here's the thing, the sexes were not created equal biologically, the burden women bear is to invest way more than men, biologically speaking, into reproduction. If you have that type of relationship with a woman I'm sure you can work it out privately, that's not something that needs legislating, any legislation that can force a woman not to have an abortion is infringing on her rights.
Shit happens. If you're man, and you don't have to take any responsibilities, you don't have to think about complications, you don't have to think about c-section or natural birth, what to eat during pregnancy, what to do with that job you really need, how to afford a baby, what happens to your entire life if you're not able to get an abortion. Your entire life, that's what a pregnancy is in real life.
It's not something you draw up on a piece of paper and go, oh, just give the baby up for adoption. Just use protection. Just don't have sex so often.
Things look perfect on paper but it's never easy in real life. I don't mind men discussing abortion issues, but at a certain point you need to step back and think that you're talking about something you never have to endure, an extremely difficult choice that you'll only have to make on paper while others have to live through, so bringing up things like responsibilities is just a little too hypocritical. As for men wanting the child but the woman doesn't. Here's the thing, the sexes were not created equal biologically, the burden women bear is to invest way more than men, biologically speaking, into reproduction. If you have that type of relationship with a woman I'm sure you can work it out privately, that's not something that needs legislating, any legislation that can force a woman not to have an abortion is infringing on her rights.