The premise being, I had sex with a woman and she got pregnant (both at fault if not the intention). As she can decide to terminate I should be able to decide not to pay.
Answer - again, the facts of life are there and well known, enter at your own risk and do your due dilligence. Or, g
but you're talking about the biological side, we can't change that (at least not at the moment) and this doesn't seek to change that - there is no change to the current situation from that perspective - the change is to the financial side, given both parents a choice re: whether they want to be parents
two people have sex, the condom breaks, the man suggests the morning after pill, the woman doesn't want to and is happy to see what happens or perhaps decides she'd be happy to have a baby - that is entirely her choice however that choice has a significant financial impact on both her partner and her - while from a biological side it is her body ergo her choice from a financial side, the financial liability/parental rights are artificially constructed by society and as they affect both then both ought to have the same right to an opt out that we currently only give to the mother.
so again yet another anti abortion argument, but you claim you're pro choice... why do the 'facts of life', 'enter at your own risk' not apply against having an abortion? You're happy for them not to need apply to the mother if she choses but you'll use the argument that could apply there against the father.
if the mother knows in advance that the father has no desire to be a parent at this point in his life and she has the free choice to have an abortion then why should he be liable for a pregnancy that she alone has decided to carry to term?
et insurance for it. That's how we normally mittigate financial risk you know!