Shouldn't Men Have
a Choice, Too?
February 19, 2002
Jennifer was crushed when she was told
that a baby was on the way. She wants to have children, but the right
way--after she has found the right person and is married. But in Jennifer's
country, she has no choice. "Jenn" cannot give the child up for adoption,
and she cannot terminate the pregnancy. It is her burden to bear, for
the next two decades, like it or not.
What country is it which compels a person to have a child they don't
want? Afghanistan? Saudi Arabia?
No, it's the United States--not for Jenn, but for Ken. Ken Johnson,
a 10 year veteran of the Seattle Fire Department, wanted to be a father,
but with the right woman, and at the right time. Three years ago he
and his wife separated after six years of marriage, and each began to
date. Ken had a brief affair with "Cathy," which resulted in a pregnancy.
Ken begged Cathy to put the child up for adoption or to terminate the
pregnancy, but Cathy refused. Now Ken and his wife, who reconciled two
and a half years ago, can't start a family of their own because almost
half of Ken's net income goes to support the child he didn't want to
have.
He says: "People tell me that Cathy should have the choice whether to
keep the child or not because it's her body so it's her choice. I agree.
But what about my body? I make my living rushing into burning buildings.
I put my life and my safety on the line every time I go to work, and
now I'm on the hook for 18 years. With the child support demands on
me, there's no way I'll ever be able to quit. What about my choice?"
Johnson is part of a growing movement of men who bristle at being "coerced
fathers," and who have enlisted in a "Choice for Men" movement whose
goals are every bit as legitimate as the goals of the women's reproductive
rights movement. They note that one million American women legally walk
away from motherhood every year by either adoption, abortion, or abandonment,
and demand that men, like women, be given reproductive options. They
point out that, unlike women, men have no reliable contraception available
to them, since the failure rate of condoms is substantial, and vasectomies
are generally only worthwhile for older men who have already married
and had children.
The Choice for Men movement seeks to give "coerced fathers" the right
to relinquish their parental rights and responsibilities within a month
of learning of a pregnancy, just as mothers do when they choose to give
their children up for adoption. These men would be obligated to provide
legitimate financial compensation to cover natal medical expenses, the
mother's loss of income during pregnancy, etc. The right would only
apply to pregnancies which occurred outside of marriage.
Some of those who fought for women's reproductive choices agree with
choice for men. Karen DeCrow, former president of the National Organization
for Women, writes: "If a woman makes a unilateral decision to bring
a 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."
To date, courts have refused to consider fathers' reproductive rights
even in the most extreme cases, including: when child support is demanded
from men who were as young as 12 when they were statutorily raped by
older women; when women have taken the semen from a used condom and
inserted it in themselves, including from condoms used only in oral
sex; and when women concealed the pregnancy from the man (denying him
the right to be a father) and then sued for back and current child support
eight or ten years later.
"It doesn't make sense to me," Ken's wife Patti says. "The courts force
my husband and I to support a child he never agreed to, but make it
financially impossible for him to have a child with the woman he loves
and married."