maly.ksiaze
10.03.03, 21:14
Post zamieszony przez osobe uzywajaca nicka 'a psik' na forum Kobieta.
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Ostatnio czytalem to co na spodzie po angielsku.
W duzym skrocie: kobiety maja prawo do aborcji a co z mezczyznami ? ponizszy
tekst postuluje takie rozwiazanie prawne nazywane brak dyskrymincaji plci w
dostepie do aborcji
Mezczyzna ktory nie chce dziecka w ciagu miesiaca od momentu dowiedzenia sie
o ciazy partnerki powinien oswiadczyc prawnie (pisemnie) ze dziecka nie chce -
decyzja musi byc podjeta w czasie gdy kobieta ma fizyczna mozliwosc usuniecia
ciazy. W przypadku gdy kobieta decyduje sie na urodzenie dziecka pomimo
negatywnemu stonowisku ojca odpowiedzialnosc prawna, finansowa itp mezczyzny
jest rowna zeru - mezczyzna dokonuje aborcji swojego ojcostwa,
odpowiedzialnosci i obowiazkow.
A wiec aborcja dla wszystkich a co....jak rownosc to rownosc: jezeli kobieta
ma prawo do aborcji to dlaczego mezczyzna ma nie miec. Do poczecia potrzeba
dwoch a decyzja o aborcji w obecnym ustawodawstwie nalezy do jednej osoby
przeciez to jawna dyskryminacja.
ponizej oryginal tekstu
There are many things to celebrate in Canada on International Women's Day
(March 8), and this country's relatively grown-up approach to reproductive
choice is among them. Unlike in the USA, where lawmakers continue to court
the religious right by restricting access to choice, Canadian women with
unplanned pregnancies are legally free to choose among abortion, adoption and
parenthood. This is something of which all Canadians should be proud.
But as much as International Women's Day is about celebrating how far we've
come, it's also an occasion to look to the future, and our celebratory mood
is dampened by the knowledge that there is still a substantial group of
people in Canada who have restricted access to reproductive choice. Nearly
half of all Canadians can be forced into parenthood before they're ready,
even if they don't want children. These people have no access to abortion and
cannot choose adoption by themselves, so a broken condom or a missed pill can
be a life-altering event. When an unplanned pregnancy occurs, they have no
legal right to opt in or out of parenthood, and, if a child is born, they are
financially responsible for supporting it for 18 years or more.
That group is men.
A woman should have an absolute right to choose if she will carry a pregnancy
to term. But as the law stands, the biological father has no control over his
own destiny: if a woman decides to abort, he has to abide by that decision
(and quite right, too