I can't find the reference but I recall reading a couple of years ago that the majority of non-custodial fathers pay either no child support or the minimum amount, which is $5 a week as they claim they have a low wage and could not support themselves if they had to pay for their kids. It seems there is a minority of men who earn large incomes and pay a significant amount of child support while the rest use loopholes [or are unemployed etc]. I remember a case in the SMH when they were reveiwing the child support laws which involved a guy who was married with three kids, got divorced, remarried and had another 2 or 3 kids and was crying poor. Basically, he was saying that he had moved on, started a new life and wanted to cut all his ties with his previous family. That may sound fair to some, but I really don't think men can shirk their financial responsibilities to kids they have fathered - ignoring the politics surrounding it, if I was male and fathered a kid, even if I didn't want any role in its upbringing I would give the correct amount of child support [18% of income for one child, up to 36% for five kids] and know that the kid had the opportunity to go to school, have three meals a day etc.
That may sound silly but there are something like 800,000 kids in this country living in poverty [not Third World conditions but still...]. If you earn $400 a week that would be less than $40 a week in child support. I know it would add up over 18 years but what is the alternative? Sometimes couples decide to try and make it work but what if a year after the kid is born the guy decides he has had enough and leaves? At the very least, I think paternity tests should be taken for every child born - it would prevent a lot of problems from happening later. It would be a lot easier to walk away, to be sure, but with adulthood comes responsibility.
Abortions are, as daledugahole said, a medical procedure - there are risks involved, women have died, cannot get pregnant again as a result etc. Essentially, this scenario is preventable - both condoms and the pill have like a 99%+ success rate when used correctly. So if it fails 1 out of 100 times, and given all the other things that need to be right for a successful conception, the number of unwanted pregnancies would be a lot smaller. Contraception is obviously a matter for both people involved, but I still think in a lot of cases a man has the final choice. It is a very grey issue, but I think women should i) consider the view of the father of the child re abortion but ii) have the final choice - statistics show that most custodial parents are female, so in the event they agreed to have the child the father could leave, remarry etc five years down the track. And as most men don't pay a crippling amount of child support, and in a sizeable minority of cases dont ever see the kids anyway there isn't a gigantic burden in the first place. Sorry for the long post - its one of those cases in which neither pro-male and pro-female parties will ever be satisfied :mad1: .