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In Kai Ma’s recent AlterNet column “The Difference
Between a Womb and a Wallet” (7/26/06) she applauds a U.S.
District Court judge’s quick, contemptuous dismissal of Matt
Dubay’s “Roe v. Wade for Men” lawsuit. Dubay sought to wipe out
the child support payments he is obligated to make to an
ex-girlfriend who, he says, used a fallacious claim of
infertility to deceive him into getting her pregnant.
In opposing “Choice for Men,” Ma
asserts that a “woman's decision to terminate a pregnancy is not
the equivalent of a man's choice to financially opt out of
fatherhood.” She cites the pain and discomfort of pregnancy, and
the way motherhood “may limit our mobility or careers.” These
problems are very real; however, so are the problems created
when men are saddled with child support obligations.
According to an estimate in
Men's Health magazine, 100,000 men each year are jailed for alleged
nonpayment of child support. Federal Office of Child Support
Enforcement data reveal that 70% of those behind on payments
earn poverty level wages. The “Most Wanted Deadbeat Dad” lists
put out by most states are used both for police actions and to
hunt and shame “deadbeats” through newspaper ads and publicity
campaigns. These lists are largely comprised of uneducated
African-American and Latino men with occupation descriptions
like "laborer," "maintenance man" and "roofer."
Ma dismisses the burden of child
support as being “a few hundred dollars a month.” However, in
California, AlterNet’s home state, a noncustodial father
of two earning a modest $3,800 a month in net income pays $1,300
a month in child support. The money--almost $300,000 over 18
years--is tax-free to the custodial mother. One can reasonably
debate whether this sum is appropriate or excessive. One cannot
reasonably dismiss it as being insignificant.
Ma portrays children as a mother’s
albatross, forgetting that parenting is also the greatest joy a
person can experience in life. Yes, in single mother homes the
mother bears the burden of most of the childrearing, but the
mothers also experience the lion’s share of the joys and
benefits of having children. Noncustodial fathers are not so
fortunate—they’re usually permitted only a few days a month to
spend with their kids. Once mom finds a new man, they’re often
pushed out entirely in favor of the child’s “new dad.”
Ma condemns men who “lie, deceive,
break their promises, or pull a 180…who agree to marry but
don't,” and laments that “millions of women” have been “trapped
into single motherhood for life with, often, next to no
recourse.” Yet according to a randomized study of 46,000 divorce
cases published in the American Law and Economics Review, two‑thirds
of all divorces involving couples with children are initiated by
mothers, not fathers, and in only 6% of cases did the women
claim to be divorcing cruel or abusive husbands.
The out-of-wedlock birth rate in
the United States hovers around 33%--given the wide variety of
contraceptive and reproductive choices women enjoy, this can
hardly be blamed primarily on men. Yes, in some of these cases
the mother and father shared a relationship which the mother
(and the father) may have expected would become a marriage. Yet
these relationships fail for many reasons besides male perfidy.
These include: youth; economic pressure and the lack of living
wage jobs (how many couples fight over money?); and the mothers’
post-partum depression and mood-swings. It’s doubtful that many
men really wake up in the morning and say to themselves “my
child loves me and needs me, my girlfriend loves me and needs
me—I’m outta here.”
Ma says men “shouldn't be able to
choose to abandon that child in the lurch.” Yet 1.5 million
American women legally walk away from motherhood every year
through adoption, abortion or abandonment. In over 40 states
mothers can completely opt out of motherhood by returning
unwanted babies to the hospital shortly after birth. If men like
Dubay are deadbeats and deserters, what are these women?
Whenever a child is born outside of
the context of a loving, two-parent family, there are no good
solutions. Ma overstates her case, but she is correct that
“Choice for Men” is a flawed solution. However, the current
regime, which provides women with a variety of choices and men
with none, is also flawed.
Dubay's conduct is not particularly
admirable, and he's certainly not a candidate for father of the
year; however, he does have a point. Over the past four decades
women’s advocates have successfully made the case that it is
wrong to force a pregnancy on an unwilling mother. Despite the
backlash against Dubay, hopefully his lawsuit will result in
a greater societal awareness that it is also wrong to force a
pregnancy on an unwilling father.
This column first appeared in
AlterNet (8/1/06).
Jeffery M.
Leving
is the
Chairman of the
Illinois
Council on Responsible Fatherhood. He is the author of the book
Fathers'
Rights: Hard-hitting and Fair Advice for Every Father Involved in a Custody
Dispute. His website is
www.dadsrights.com.
Glenn
Sacks' columns on men's and fathers' issues have appeared in dozens of America's
largest newspapers. Glenn can be reached via his website at
www.GlennSacks.com or
via email at Glenn@GlennSacks.com.
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