30
Years After Roe v. Wade,
How About Choice for Men?
January 22, 2003
On
January 22, 1973, the United States Supreme Court eliminated a checkerboard
of state laws on reproductive freedom and guaranteed American women choice
throughout the country. Thirty years later, American men are still waiting
for the same right.
When a woman gets pregnant she has the right to decide whether or not
to carry the baby to term, and whether to raise the child herself or to
give it up for adoption. In many states she can even terminate all parental
responsibility by returning the baby to the hospital within a few weeks
of birth. Yet if she decides she wants the child, she can demand 18 years
of child support from the father, and he has no choice in the matter.
When it comes to reproduction, in America today women have rights and
men merely have responsibilities.
Certainly
nobody should be able to dictate to a woman what she can and cannot do
with her own body, thus the feminist slogan "My Body, My Choice." Yet
our current laws allow a woman to dictate to a man what to do with his
body. The average American father works a 51-hour work week, one of the
longest in the industrialized world. It is men, overwhelmingly, who do
our society's hazardous and most strenuous jobs, and nearly 50 American
workers--mostly men--are injured every minute of the 40-hour work week.
Can anybody deny that the sacrifices required to pay 18 years of child
support take a heavy toll on a man's body, too? Where's his choice?
Feminists are legitimately concerned that, if abortion were banned, the
government would be exercising control over a very intimate and important
part of a woman's life. But when a woman forces a man to be responsible
for a child only she wants, and when the state child-support apparatus
takes a third or more of his income and jails him if he comes up short,
isn't the government exercising control over his life?
The "Choice for Men" movement seeks to give 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 pregnancy-related medical expenses and the mother's
loss of income during pregnancy. The right would only apply to pregnancies
which occurred outside of marriage, and women would still be free to exercise
all of the reproductive choices they now have.
Advocates of Choice for Men note that over 1.5 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 impractical for young men who plan on becoming fathers
later in life.
Since there are long backlogs of stable, two-parent families looking for
babies to adopt, there is no reason why any child born out of wedlock
to unwilling parents would be without a good home. In addition, if women
knew that they could not compel men to pay to support children they do
not want, the number of unwed births (and the social problems associated
with them) would be reduced.
Some of those who fought for women's reproductive choices support 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 respect men's 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
a woman has concealed her pregnancy from her former partner (denying him
the right to be a father) and then sued for back and current child support
eight or ten years later.
The National Abortion Rights Action League (renamed "NARAL Pro-Choice
America" on January 1 of this year), has been in the forefront of the
struggle for choice for women for over three decades. They explain that
"the essence of America is the right to determine the course of one's
life, to make one's own choices and shape one's own destiny. A woman's
freedom to choose is integral to that concept of liberty." Fine words,
but is there one of them which does not apply equally to men? Shouldn't
men have a choice, too?
Glenn
J. Sacks
Published first on www.MensNewsDaily.com. This column will
also appear in the Mail & Guardian, published in Johannesburg and
Cape Town, South Africa.