It's not a red herring, but the rejection a false comparison, and in this case the comparison is totally ridiculous. To equate a woman's body with a man's money is foolish, even if you call it his "self and identity". The argument lacks credibility all by itself without any help from me.
I haven't once claimed that injustice could never occur with a blanket law obliging fathers to help raise their own children in some way. From the beginning, I've pointed out that very often in life, injustice occurs. Families are hotbeds of injustice. Sometimes innocent children are forced to mow the lawn against their will when they'd rather be playing video games. Sometimes mothers have to clean up projectile vomit that they took no part in creating. Sometimes fathers have to go to work while everybody else goes to the zoo. I'm sure every member of any family could list a litany of injustices. I can't think of anything more tedious than trying to examine the details of all these complaints to definitively establish once and for all who got the crappiest deal.
Courts do consider the details of every scenario that is placed before them.
Being a father is about more than money. A relationship with the father is also in the child's best interest. I have real difficulty perceiving the financial burden of child support payments (thinking of Mystic's $100 a month - about the same as my car insurance) as a major affront to a man's rights and freedoms. Especially when weighed against the child's best interests.
It really isnt a ridiculous comparison for the purposes i intended. I only bring it up to highlight what it is we use as valid justification for most instances of autonomy and freedom to own oneself and correlated it with the mans situation to demonstrate that it in principle, regardless of what it consists of, is necessarily from similar foundations. Only done to try and flesh out what it is we're talking about.
ok sure i do accept that you arnt proposing that injustice cant foreseeably occur under a blanket law, but equally im not really claiming any more than that also.
I know being a father is much much more than some naff support payment, which just further exemplifies the really tough position some guys can find themselves in, when they might very well wish to be dads and have a family to love, but have it happen through accident and choices beyond their control, with women who choose for them not to be around.
You must admit that there is some degree of imbalance of control to the potential detriment of the men when it comes to these matters. A woman is legitimately justified in choosing a termination, such that her considerations are deemed more important than that of an embryo. And that strikes me as fair. Clearly the acceptability of such a decision gets less the more developed the child becomes, as with their development comes their increasing rights alongside.
So if the male cannot support a decision of continued pregnancy, should he be allowed to state his position early enough and it be fair for him to do so? Should the decision of a female to continue with a pregnancy be something done in a manner independent of the male? Because at such an early stage we arnt strictly talking about a child, but of an embryo with the potential of being a child. Its a whole different scenario for a man to walk away from a child that already exists.
What do you make of this following quote by the way, i think i included it in an earlier post somewhere to Mystic.
Former president of the National Organisation for Women attorney Karen DeCrow who wrote that;
'if a woman makes a unilateral decision to bring pregnancy to term, and the biological father does not, and cannot, share in this decision, he should not be liable for 21 years of support...autonomous women making independent decisions about their lives should not expect men to finance their choice.'