It is and it should be. Rape is illegal. Men are put in jail for it. Neither men nor women should be required to wear anything in particular, go anywhere in particular, drink or not drink, etc. Women should be allowed to do what they want with their bodies too, especially when unlike in the case of abortion, that something they decide to do isn't killing or harming anybody who hasn't consented, like having sex in exchange for money.
But prostitution isn't about women doing what they want with their bodies. It's about them (perhaps) getting paid to allow others to do what they want to the woman's body. Or for her to do what someone else wants to their body. Seriously: it's not about a woman's desires at all.
Financial support is already in the law books. Men are already forced to pay that whether or not they intended a baby to result. As for emotional support, how would you enforce that?
I dunno. Plenty of men are pretty skilled at avoiding paying support. I'm neither a judge nor a lawyer. Enforcement of emotional support would need to be figured out by the court system.
I would not expect a man to be rendered infertile if the mother of his child is left infertile after a pregnancy or childbirth. Or to die if the mother dies as the result of complications from pregnancy or childbirth. Or to postpone necessary medical treatment until after a child is born. Or to submit to drug/alcohol testing as soon as a pregnancy is detected (although statistically speaking this might not be a bad idea. A significant number of women face complications to their pregnancies due to domestic abuse while they are pregnant.)
Sure, but what does any of that have to do with willing prostitutes? Male or female?
Well, it doesn't. I guess you didn't follow my post very well. That was part of a side bar about recognizing that biologically men do not and cannot and should not be made to bear the same risks that women bear as a result of sex, mutual or not.
Why should not a man be required --not just allowed, but required--to take a parental leave (paid, of course) when his child is born or when he adopts?
Why should he be? Are pregnant women? I know some who go back to work immediately.... like as in days after.
Sure, I know women who go back to work immediately--as in the day or two after. Whether they want to or not. And I know women who are quite open about hoping for a c-section because then they can get a longer maternity leave.
What I was talking about was maternity/paternity leave, not a leave during pregnancy. I was kind of joking when I wrote that originally, but why not? It would do a lot to close the pay gap, actually, if men were mandated to take leaves after a new child arrives--coordinated with his partner's leave, of course.
Why shouldn't he be required --not allowed but: required to take time away from work 50% of the time necessary to attend to any of his children's needs?
Why should he be? Is she? She has the option of adopting out, abortion, etc. He is at least forced to pay child support.
It's his child and as much his responsibility as it is hers to provide all necessary care for the child.
In the US, a woman cannot give her child up for adoption without the consent of the biological father. Both have to agree. Women can be ordered to pay support as can men.