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@3RU7AL
That doesn’t look like what I wrote in my first few responses in this thread, where I detailed those differences. So, yes, I guess you haven’t found them yet.
NOT giving money to some chick you had mutually consensual intercourse with
That doesn’t look like what I wrote in my first few responses in this thread, where I detailed those differences. So, yes, I guess you haven’t found them yet.
it's not "nonsense"it's factand, clearly, any woman who would intentionally murder (or infanticide) their own infanthas some sort of "mental disorder"
Not sure why you quoted yourself but responded to me. Also not sure what this has to do with my argument.
is the seeming belief that all child murders legally qualify as infanticide.
I’m working. Feel free to read back through the thread.That's an odd comparison. No one is arguing that a mother can abandon her child after it is born into the world alive. If you wanted to make this somewhat comparable, you would have to argue that the father could refuse to pay child support in utero, which isn't a thing in the first place so it's not something that a father can refuse to do. I also agree with Ehyeh that it's not symmetrical in terms of the specifics of the burdens the child places on the mother versus the father. Child support is not equivalent to the physical burdens of pregnancy, nor is ending that child support functionally equivalent to an abortion.
If it is the case that women can willingly engage in sex and subsequently abort the fetus because "her body is her choice", does it then follow that a male can impregnate a female and subsequently not pay child support because "his body his choice"? It is
i never made this claimi said that if the mother of a child kills her own childwithin the first 12 month of it being bornis NOT murderand furthermore, they rarely get any serious jail time (at least in canada)
That's an odd comparison.
No one is arguing that a mother can abandon her child after it is born into the world alive.
If you wanted to make this somewhat comparable, you would have to argue that the father could refuse to pay child support in utero, which isn't a thing in the first place so it's not something that a father can refuse to do.
I also agree with Ehyeh that it's not symmetrical in terms of the specifics of the burdens the child places on the mother versus the father.
Child support is not equivalent to the physical burdens of pregnancy, nor is ending that child support functionally equivalent to an abortion.
Sometimes it’s murder - sometimes it’s infanticide.
No one is arguing that a mother can abandon her child after it is born into the world alive.Some states, like Missouri, allow parents to abandon a child anytime before the child turns 45 days old. If the child is older than 45 days, but less than one year, parents may use the safe haven law as an affirmative defense against criminal charges of abandonment and child endangerment. [**]
If you wanted to make this somewhat comparable, you would have to argue that the father could refuse to pay child support in utero, which isn't a thing in the first place so it's not something that a father can refuse to do.please explain why you think this is comparable
I also agree with Ehyeh that it's not symmetrical in terms of the specifics of the burdens the child places on the mother versus the father.except that the mother has the ability to "opt out" and the father apparently does not
Child support is not equivalent to the physical burdens of pregnancy, nor is ending that child support functionally equivalent to an abortion.exactlyending and or refusing to pay child support is LESS morally repugnant than killing a fetus
If you wanted to make this somewhat comparable, you would have to argue that the father could refuse to pay child support in utero, which isn't a thing in the first place so it's not something that a father can refuse to do.please explain why you think this is comparableBecause it would then take place within the same timeframe and represent a commitment on the part of the father to the unborn during pregnancy.
except that the mother has the ability to "opt out" and the father apparently does notNot responsive to my point, though I'll note that if the mother "opts out" then the father automatically does, whereas the father's decision actively harms the mother's position should she choose not to opt out.
ending and or refusing to pay child support is LESS morally repugnant than killing a fetusI disagree,
and I'll note that now you're getting into issues of morality and the basis for determining whether abortion itself is morally reprehensible,
which falls outside of this discussion.
You agree that this is a valid distinction,
yet you do not agree that that makes the comparison between these burdens problematic. Why not?
except that the mother has the ability to "opt out" and the father apparently does not
we agree the father does NOT have a choice
i said that if the mother of a child kills her own childwithin the first 12 month of it being bornis NOT murder
symmetry would only demand that the father EITHER accept OR reject the (financial) responsibility within the same timeframe as the mother
we agree the father does NOT have a choicewe agree that the mother DOES have a choice
only because you've given ZERO reason to support the claim that a father should be coerced by the state to basically pay "restitution" for a "non crime"
the physical and moral and financial burden on the mother is MUCH higher and yet, you still give the mother a choice to "opt out"the physical and moral and financial burden on the father is much LOWER and yet, you give them NO choicelower stakes should allow for GREATER discretion (not less)
I won’t necessarily disagree that the law could use clarification: but that doesn’t make any of your characterization of the application of the law valid - because it clearly isn’t.
symmetry would only demand that the father EITHER accept OR reject the (financial) responsibility within the same timeframe as the motherExcept that the father doesn’t currently have any obligation during that time frame. That’s my point.
we agree the father does NOT have a choicewe agree that the mother DOES have a choiceAgain, not responsive to my point, but it’s pretty clear you don’t want to address it.
only because you've given ZERO reason to support the claim that a father should be coerced by the state to basically pay "restitution" for a "non crime"Not so. I argued that the reason is the survival of the child and, for that matter, a balancing of obligations. It strikes me as odd that both you and Bones have argued this perspective of the need for symmetry, but then argue against symmetry when it comes to obligations.
That’s part of the problem here: you get an asymmetry regardless. Granting the father the choice gives him equal choice to the mother, but both deprives the child should they have it (of both a father and financial support) and places the entire burden of support on the mother. That’s not symmetrical.
Again, assumptive of moral harm. Financial and physical burdens I agree with, but that sets the burden on her higher than on the father, so yes, the option to opt out is more important to them. The lack of such an option affects them far more than it does the father. If you want to argue that the lower burden on the father somehow should yield a similar conclusion, I’d like to know why.
not mixing it with the pro-life point and making an entirely separate argument.
so, are you trying to say that you think that a perfectly sane and mentally stable mother can intentionally kill her ownchild within the first 12 months ?