smartestnumber5
<font color=blue>Then it's just a fun time<br><fon
- Joined
- Apr 21, 2006
- Messages
- 2,933
This is the vast majority.
As I said, I'm not opposed to trying to find solutions for the other hypothetical girl. I'm not willing to just toss up my hands and cede parental authority though. Again, all or nothing solutions are lazy and wrong.
I'm am definitely concerned about the hypothetical girl who is being raped by her father or will be beaten for having sex or thrown out of the house for having considered having an abortion. But at least in these cases there are laws protecting such girls (thought they don't seem to do much good most of the time.)
I am more concerned about a great many more girls whose abuse is legalized by these laws. I consider forcing a teen to have an abortion or forcing her to remain pregnant an obvious case of abuse--no different in kind than the state forcing an adult woman to remain pregnant or have an abortion. I can only assume that many parents are ready and willing to use the law to force their own will upon their daughter's bodies; I've known some.
I assume folks on this thread are more reasonable and would not force their own will on their teenage daughters, but simply want to be involved in the decisions and know what is going on with their daughter. (This, I think, was my mom's reason for supporting such laws.) In this case it seems parental notification laws (which some states have) would do just fine, and there is no need for consent laws.
Also statistics show that the majority of girls seeking abortions do in fact tell their parents. I can only assume that many more girls who are pregnant tell their parents. So realistically, most good parents don't need a law to force their daughters to tell them about these things; their daughters do so on their own. So if the law isn't actually making any difference for the good parents, then who is the law for? The bad parents? Or is the need for the law to protect parental authority simply a matter of principle? It doesn't matter what the consequences of the law are or who the law helps or hurts, the law just has to uphold parental authority out of principle?
I understand your desire not to have an all or nothing solution. But in the case of consent to a major life decision which intimately involves one's body it is all or nothing. Either the parent gets to make the decision or the teen does. Parental consent give ALL to the parents and I think that's the wrong ALL.