There could always be reasons which would vindicate her--maybe there were other relationship problems like abuse or control issues on his part which made her think that allowing him to know about the abortion beforehand or ask his opinion would lead to him trying to control her. Maybe she thought that he would be too emotional to be able to make the sensible choice of abortion and thought that she would take that burden on for him by not asking him to be part of something he morally disapproved of. Could be a ton of reasons. I'll just assume none of those are the case.)
You're right in assuming none of those are the case.
If this is an accurate story of what happened, then it seems these folks must have had serious relationship problems
But you're wrong in assuming this.
They had the
perfect relationship up until the 'Oh, by the way, I had an abortion.' conversation.
You can't place X and Y to equal Z from a word problem that only has Z, ya know.
But the problems in this case are not problems related to abortion--they are much more general relationship problems.
But
this was about the abortion. They had
no problems prior to the woman taking 'mothers' lead', as she puts it to me.
But notice, the issue here is the kind of relationship my GF and I have. It has nothing to do with any rights of mine.
Yes, but that is an entirely different situation.
Until you meet my friends, don't assume it's not what I say. You can't. You don't know me, nor my friends. Nor do you know what they've gone through/what they haven't.
So in the situation of your friend, what do you think the woman should have done?
Told him. BOTH times. Given him
something, given him a
chance to sit down, and think, "Okay, so she's wanting an abortion. Why?", and to discuss it with her.
I think it's selfish for the mother to just go and say, "Hi, honey, how was work? Oh, by the way, I'm no longer pregnant."
That puts a great deal of stress on the father, especially if he had no clue she was going into the procedure.
Now if she says that and she goes and gets the abortion, has she given him the "say" you are looking for?
Yes, because she,
A: Told him.
B: Discussed it with him.
C: In this case, the 'tiebreaker' was the mother. I can't say it's going to be the same for
all cases.
And, as for adoption...it's not a 'cure' for anything. I'm sorry, but, comparing it to abortion, I would rather see my child/fetus die in the hands of a doctor/medically trained professional than in the hands of a (possible) rapist/murderer/molester/robber/etc.
And as for 'safe sex'...there's really no such thing. Not 100%. Not even 97%. So, what, all married couples are supposed to abstain, now? "Honey, we can't boink tonight, I don't want an abortion tomorrow."
There have always been ways of getting rid of unwanted children before or after birth, but these who are pro life never seem to have an answer to what happens to the child.
Even if you make it illegal...I mean, look at the early sixties, fifties, even...illegal contraception and illegal/botched abortions were being done...quite honestly, wouldn't it be better to have it legal and safe, than illegal and done in the alleys?
You never answered any of the questions anyway.
He answered far more than
you did!
His answers were, "I don't
know." in relation to the 'tiebreaker' theory. Or did you somehow miss that?? (Btw, he's answered it....
MANY times...)