The involvement of the father is not always necessary and if the father wants to give up any paternal rights, he can petition for that through the courts. Should he choose not to financially support a child, then he shouldn't have put himself in the position of creating one in the first place. There are such things has condoms you know.
I disagree with "he shouldn't have put himself in the position." Just as I disagree with it when it comes off the lips of anti-choicers regarding women's bodies.
The basis of my belief in choice comes from the point that an early pregnancy is not a baby. Because it is not a baby, a person yet. And terminating that pregnancy is not murder. It is a procedure done prior to the development of a baby.
And I believe it follows that this is also true for the man. A discussion that happens when a woman is pregnant but prior to there being a baby ("person") should allow the man to say,
before the creation a baby, I am saying "no." I strongly believe this statement should be available to
both men and women prior to viability. That is, Pre-Baby.
If a man doesn't want to be financially tied down - then he needs to step up to the plate and do something proactive. It shouldn't always be up to the woman to look after birth control.
And I believe that if a man does not want to be tied down, he biologically has that choice for as long as the woman has that choice.
That **IF** she wants to have an abortion and avoid parenthood because she doesn't feel like creating a baby, she has every right to.
And likewise, if the man wants to avoid parenthood because he doesn't feel like creating a baby he has that right also. The biological difference being that he cannot force her to have an abortion (as it should be!), but I strongly believe he should be able to sign away all rights
as if he did have an abortion and this leaves her with the choice to continue the pregnancy and create a baby knowing she's the only one accepting that decision OR decide on an abortion after all because the decision to be a single parent makes her not want it so much after all.
I strongly believe that arguments forcing men to be fathers at a time prior to the existence of a fetal person is the same argument as those forcing women to be mothers prior to the existence of a fetal person. And that those arguments are unjustified.
If that woman is deciding between continuing a pregnancy as a single mother or terminating that pregnancy because of single-motherhood, that is her right. I do not believe it is her right to recruit an unwilling father
before the baby exists.
I strongly believe that anyone who argues that there is no personhood prior to a certain point MUST accept the man's rights to reject parenthood at that point just as much as a woman's.
The woman still has an extra choice given by biology that the man does not have; continuing as a single parent. But I do not believe there is an argument that she can force a man to continue a pregnancy with her, when he has made his choice prior to the existence of a "baby".