3point14
Pi
- Joined
- Nov 4, 2005
- Messages
- 23,073
You really don't get me at all. Yes, having sex is gambling. The possible outcomes are: nothing, an STD, a pregnancy, or both an STD and a pregnancy. There exist methods of reducing changing the odds: condoms, the pill, IUDs, vasectomy, using a different orifice. Those methods possess differing rates of probable success. They are not guaranteed perfect success because nothing in life is guaranteed perfect success. Whether employing any/some/none of these methods to mitigate the risk is up to the two individuals involved. Whether the resulting odds of an unfavorable outcome make the activity worth doing is, again, up to the two individuals. Whether they realize it or not it will always be a gamble. Every action possible is a gamble, the pursuit of one possible outcome gambled against the probability of other outcomes. That has nothing to do with fairness, or deserving, or punishment. It's an inexorable reality of existence. Whining about that won't help.
I'm entirely getting you. You think that any man not prepared to be a father should not have sex. As you outline above. As you say, "sex is a gamble". (but only for the man).
I'm not whining. I'm pointing out what your position, logically, leads a young man to conclude. That he should be celibate if he does not want to be a father. You describe exactly that above, but you're not prepared to arrive at the conclusion of your argument because you know it makes you seem like a puritan.
Have the courage of your convictions and state, as you intimate above, that you believe that people who are not prepared to (or cannot afford to or by dint of other circumstances, really are poorly placed to) have a baby should not have any sort of sexual contact. (Sex is not a prerequisite for pregnancy)
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