I totally agree. The simple fact is that if a woman does not want to have a child, she should also not engage in consensual sex. But we give women a right the man does not have -the right to unilaterally decide to terminate the pregnancy. Wouldn’t it be fair to say that she should also accept personal responsibility and thus abortion should be restricted to cases of non-consensual sex or life-threatening problems with the fetus or to the woman?
But no, that is punishing the woman. People who espouse this simple idea are derided as slut-shamers and religious nuts. Yet we have no problem punishing the man. I can understand where the idea of paper abortions comes from, even if I no longer believe it’s the right solution.
I mean, if we were space-robots, as theprestige might say, the logic behind paper abortions is sound as you yourself kinda illustrated above. But we are humans and we have to account for the thorny issues human nature introduces.
To play the devil's advocate, I think the idea of paper abortions has to do with the idea that the woman has an opportunity to mitigate damages via abortion that a man does not.
An example. Say a man negligently hits a woman with his car, causing a slow internal bleed. That's bad and reckless, and he should be responsible for the damages. But let's say the woman is taken to the hospital and against all good medical advice and common sense, she refuses to have the medical condition treated. Days go on as the bleeding continues, but the woman, being of sound mind, still refuses treatment. As a result of this lack of treatment, her injury is much more severe and her damages are far greater.
Should the driver have to pay the woman damages that were easily avoidable had she had the medical procedure? No, because she failed to mitigate her damages. Even though he caused the injury, the woman failed to take reasonable steps to limit the scope of those damages, so the man is not found responsible for the full damages, only the smaller part that was unavoidable.
This is known in the law as a duty to mitigate damages.
Devil's advocate hat off now. I don't really find my own argument here convincing. Many wouldn't see abortion as preferable to unwanted pregnancy, so implying there is some requirement to act in that way is not reasonable. This is further complicated that support is for the child, not the mother, so even if you think the mother did not mitigate damages, the child should not suffer the consequences.
More broadly, such a law would be against the public good, if you consider that every child being supported by two parents as a generally good outcome.