I had always assumed that if a man had gotten a woman pregnant, then if that pregnancy is carried to term, both partners should be financially responsible for the child regardless whether the man had wanted to have the child or not. The mindset being “they got them pregnant, so you have to face the consequences’”.
I was talking with some people online, and they asserted that if the man did not want to have the child, then they should be able to apply to be resolved of any financial responsibility towards caring for it. I was at first against this proposal, but I feel like I now understand it better. Our current legislation was created at a time where abortion was tantamount to murder, and since it was illegal, an obligation of financial responsibility was the only way to ensure that women weren’t stranded with children they couldn’t afford to raise. But now that we live in a world where abortion is legal (for now), and where abortion procedures are safer than carrying the child to term, there doesn’t seem to be a good argument for men still needing to be financially responsible for unwanted children. Men probably would still need to assist in paying for the procedure, but outside of that, I think they had a point. Please explain to me if there is anything I’m failing to consider here.
I also want to apologize for the binary language I used in writing this. I tried at first to write this in a more inclusive way, but I struggled wrapping my head around it. If anyone can educate me in how to write in a way that doesn’t disclude non-binary comrades, I would appreciate it.
There’s so many comments in this thread that are basically carbon copies of the “listen, i want universal healthcare too, but we don’t live in that world so we need to make this an individual thing and ‘tighten our belts’” except they apply it to universal child support. It’s ok to be revolutionary and not budge when it comes to universal healthcare, education, etc. but when it’s child support they all of a sudden become incrementalist libs.
I’n my opinion, it kind of doesn’t matter.
Regardless of the universal welfare systems in place, the decision is still something that is very personal and individualistic. So, maybe just leave the decision to the people who are directly affected and get out of their way.
So, maybe just leave the decision to the people who are directly affected and get out of their way.
Exactly, so just let the person(s) who don’t want the child to leave and not force them to pay child support.
That might be a decision that some people make.
When they can’t come to an agreement on their own, they can sue for child support. That’s pretty common in the USA.