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- Xref: sparky soc.women:22073 soc.men:22053 alt.feminism:6754 talk.abortion:53955
- Newsgroups: soc.women,soc.men,alt.feminism,talk.abortion
- Path: sparky!uunet!newsgate.watson.ibm.com!yktnews!admin!The-Village!waterbed
- From: margoli@watson.ibm.com (Larry Margolis)
- Subject: Re: Parallel situations
- Sender: news@watson.ibm.com (NNTP News Poster)
- Message-ID: <1993Jan03.191250.6295@watson.ibm.com>
- Date: Sun, 03 Jan 1993 19:12:50 GMT
- News-Software: IBM OS/2 PM RN (NR/2) v0.16f by O. Vishnepolsky and R. Rogers
- Lines: 191
- Reply-To: margoli@watson.IBM.com
- Disclaimer: This posting represents the poster's views, not necessarily those of IBM
- References: <1992Dec29.190139.11562@watson.ibm.com> <1993Jan1.015705.29920@rotag.mi.org> <1993Jan02.043753.4844@watson.ibm.com> <1993Jan3.135552.11886@rotag.mi.org>
- Nntp-Posting-Host: netslip63.watson.ibm.com
- Organization: The Village Waterbed
-
- In <1993Jan3.135552.11886@rotag.mi.org> kevin@rotag.mi.org (Kevin Darcy) writes:
- >In article <1993Jan02.043753.4844@watson.ibm.com> margoli@watson.IBM.com writes:
- >>In <1993Jan1.015705.29920@rotag.mi.org> kevin@rotag.mi.org (Kevin Darcy) writes:
- >>>In article <1992Dec29.190139.11562@watson.ibm.com> margoli@watson.IBM.com writes:
- >>>>In <1992Dec29.031344.19977@rotag.mi.org> kevin@rotag.mi.org (Kevin Darcy) writes:
- >>>>>In article <1992Dec28.182701.28515@watson.ibm.com> margoli@watson.IBM.com writes:
- >>>>>>In <1992Dec24.181349.2692@rotag.mi.org> kevin@rotag.mi.org (Kevin Darcy) writes:
- >>>>>>>In article <1hb1i8INNf40@hpsdde.sdd.hp.com> regard@hpsdde.sdd.hp.com (Adrienne Regard) writes:
- >>>>>>>>
- >>>>>>>>Unsupported assertion. Why? A woman retains the right NOT to legally
- >>>>>>>>dissolve all ties, but to REMOVE the fetus from her body.
- >>>>>>>
- >>>>>>>However, the EFFECT of a successful abortion is NOT ONLY to remove the
- >>>>>>>biological dependency, but to also remove the associated financial obligation
- >>>>>>>as well. If we parallel the latter, and it would result in more equity.
- >>>>>>
- >>>>>>Minor quibble - there is no financial obligation prior to birth.
- >>>>>
- >>>>>We've had this discussion before, Larry. Saying that there is no financial
- >>>>>obligation before birth is like saying that there I have no financial
- >>>>>obligation for my credit card purchases until the bill arrives from the bank,
- >>>>>gas company, department store or wherever. True, there is no STATEMENT OF
- >>>>>ACCOUNT, until the bill arrives, but the charges are incurred well before
- >>>>>then.
- >>>>
- >>>>Not really - you have a financial obligation for your credit card purchases
- >>>>whether or not the bill shows up.
- >>>
- >>>That doesn't address the point, Larry. I'm not saying that a man has a
- >>>financial obligation even if there is no paternity award (analogous to the
- >>>credit card bill); I'm saying that the man's financial obligations are
- >>>_incurred_ prior to when they are _assigned_. It's a retroactive debt.
- >>
- >>Again you miss the point - the retroactive debt is *conditional* on the birth
- >>of a child. If no child results, then there will be no paternity award, and
- >>so no legal financial obligation for the man even though the same expenses
- >>were incurred by the woman as in the case when there *is* a paternity award.
- >
- >Larry, the topic of discussion is child support.
-
- No, the topic is "parallel situations".
-
- >If there is no child, there is no child support, and thus no discussion.
-
- But there are still charges incurred by the woman (including the cost of the
- abortion if she gets one, and any medical expenses incurred prior to that).
- There is no financial obligation on the part of the man unless and until a
- child is born.
-
- >>>>According to the ruling you posted
- >>>>previously, the man has no financial obligation unless a child is born.
- >>>
- >>>Learn the difference between "unless" and "until", Larry.
- >>
- >>OK, unless *and* until. My point stands.
- >
- >Wrong. The man incurs debt PRIOR to the birth of the child, unless the
- >birth doesn't occur. There is no "until".
- >
- >>>It's a contingent debt -- contingent on the birth of the child
- >>
- >>If you understand this, then why are you arguing with me?
- >
- >Because you didn't limit yourself to saying "child support is a contingent
- >debt" or "child support attaches, unless the woman miscarries or aborts".
- >You went and introduced chronology, by saying "there is no financial
- >obligation prior to birth". That innocuous-looking word "prior" actually
- >drags along with it a whole baggage-load of preconceptions about the
- >sequentiality of chronological events -- sequentiality that the law
- >gingerly violates when it assigns debts retroactively.
- >
- >Moral of the story: pick your words carefully.
- >
- >>>>>Similarly, there is no formal "billing" of pregnancy/child-support costs
- ^^^^^^^^^
- >>>>>until a child is born, and the paternity award is made, but that doesn't mean
- >>>>>the charges aren't INCURRED before the child is born.
- >>>>
- >>>>The charges are incurred by the woman whether or not a child results;
- >>>
- >>>Huh? Are you claiming a woman is liable for child support even if there is no
- >>>child born?
- >>
- >>Huh? Are you claiming that a woman doesn't have to pay her doctor's bills
- >>for prenatal care if she miscarries?
- >
- >Those charges are not covered under our topic of discussion, Larry, which
- >is paternity child support liability. Why do you insist on trying to
- >introduce irrelevancies?
-
- See the word "pregnancy" that I highlighted above? You wrote that, Kevin.
- If it's an irrelevancy, it was introduced by you. Moral of the story:
- pick your words carefully.
-
- >>>>...the
- >>>>man is only obligated to pay a portion of those charges if a child results
- >>>>and a paternity award is made. If no child results, then there is no
- >>>>paternity award, and therefore no financial obligation for the man even
- >>>>though charges were incurred by the woman.
- >>>
- >>>Wrong, Larry. A paternity award doesn't "incur" the man's debt,
- >>
- >>I didn't say it did. Pregnancy-related charges are incurred by the woman
- >>during the course of the pregnancy. If no child results then there is no
- >>financial obligation for the man even though charges were incurred by the
- >>woman.
- >
- >You said "there is no financial obligation [...] prior to birth".
-
- No, I said "there is no financial obligation prior to birth".
-
- >Was I wrong to fill in the missing verb or verb phrase (that I've
- >now marked with an ellipsis) with "incurred"? If so, what verb or
- >verb phrase did you mean?
-
- You were wrong to assume *anything* was missing. The verb in that sentence
- is "is". It's a perfectly gramatical sentence, like "There is no life
- after death". Please don't assume things I didn't say and then argue
- against that; it wastes everyone's time and makes you look foolish.
-
- >>>>Note that I'm not making any claims as to legal principle here; I'm simply
- >>>>basing this on a citation that you yourself have previously posted.
- >>>
- >>>You grossly misinterpreted what I posted. There is nothing in the statute
- >>>which supports your interpretation.
- >>
- >>Perhaps you didn't read it...
- >
- >I read it all right, Larry. It says nothing about _when_ the man's liability
- >is incurred.
-
- Again, "incurred" is your word. If you'll recall, you posted that statute
- in response to Adrienne Regard's assertion that there was no financial
- obligation on the part of the man prior to birth. You disagreed with her,
- but the statute you posted showed that she was correct, since the paternity
- award (which *can* include pregnancy-related expenses) is conditional on
- the birth of a child. I was simply trying to remind you of this when you
- started talking about paralleling the removal of financial obligations.
-
- >>>>>>You're assuming a "right to terminate her financial liability"; it seems
- >>>>>>to me that preventing any such liability from coming into being is a side
- >>>>>>effect of preventing any child from being born.
- >>>>>
- >>>>>It's an effect, nonetheless, and that's all that matters. Whether it's one
- >>>>>of the "main" effects or a "side" effect is just a matter of arbitrary
- >>>>>semantics.
- >>>>
- >>>>If you agree that it's an effect of a right, and not a right itself, then
- >>>>it's *not* "just a matter of arbitrary semantics."
- >>>
- >>>The two effects (i.e. severance of financial liability, physical removal of
- >>>the fetus) are separable effects,
- >>
- >>How do you separate them before birth?
- >
- >The woman's child support liability could, in theory, be waived, even if she
- >decided to keep the child. Likewise, in theory, the woman could be held
- >responsible for child support even if she aborted (it wouldn't be support
- >for THAT child, of course, but she could still be assigned the child
- >support of some OTHER child in lieu of the one she aborted).
-
- [This strikes me as nonsense, but this was an aside anyway, so I won't
- pursue it.]
-
- >>>therefore it is perfectly valid to say that
- >>>the woman who aborts or chooses not to abort, under the current laws,
- >>>exercises two legal rights, not just one. Equity demands that the man should
- >>>be given a parallel to one of those rights -- the right to sever his
- >>>financial liability to the (potential) child, in the same manner as the woman
- >>>can exercise this same right.
- >>
- >>The woman exercises her right to remove the fetus from her body; the man has
- >>the same right to remove the fetus from *his* body if it is in there.
- >
- >Okay...
- >
- >>The only "right to sever financial liability" that I know of is the "right"
- >>to put the kid up for adoption.
- >
- >Duh. Abortion => no kid => no child support liability. Looks like a severance
- >to me (actually, I think "discharge" is the more correct term)...
-
- "Duh" yourself. That severs financial responsibility, but the question at
- hand is, does she have a *right* to sever financial responsibility. (See
- above, where I wrote "You're assuming a 'right to terminate...".) She has
- a *right* to remove the fetus; is the termination of financial
- responsibility for child support a *right* in and of itself, or merely a
- side-effect of the right of removal? If you're talking about paralleling
- *rights*, the distinction is important.
- --
- Larry Margolis, MARGOLI@YKTVMV (Bitnet), margoli@watson.IBM.com (Internet)
-