I probably shouldn't get involved considering how much of a clusterfuck these threads turn into, but anyway...
Chou, I don't think any of that really amounts to rape. It's a horrible and shitty thing to do, but the problem with your argument is that all forms of contraception (barring stuff like hysterectomies and physical castration, I guess) come with a chance of failing and resulting in pregnancy. Condoms, the pill, vasectomies, etc etc, they all have that slight chance of failure, which I honestly don't think is really communicated enough so most people aren't really aware.
This basically makes "safe" hetero sex a game of chance, with the "losers" getting pregnant if they're really unlucky. The consent was there, even if the people weren't educated that "safe" sex still had a chance of failing, so I don't think it would be fair to call it rape in any sense of the word (also seems a bit degrading to actual rape victims). Even if it did count as rape I don't think men should ever be the ones in control of what happens to a woman's body, considering abortion is generally a form of (very uncomfortable) surgery.
That being said, however, I do think men should have the right to sign away any rights and responsibilities to parenthood before the birth. For example, a dude has a one-night stand, the woman gets pregnant and wants to keep it, he would then be able to choose whether he wants to sign away all his rights as a biological father (so not having to pay child support, but also not being allowed access to the child), along with not being able to go back on it when the kid turns 18 so he can skip having to pay for it while still getting the benefit of, you know, being a parent.
Of course, there's many problems with that, not even counting whether you think that men should have to pay for their kids if it's a standard sexual encounter. Like how long would the guy have to debate it (since presumably his answer would also affect the woman's choice to keep the child), what if the dude can't be found, is it fair to make people make life-long decisions like that in <9 months, etc etc. I'm not sure it could ever become a real legal option due to the many problems with it. Complex issues suck, in other words.
Chou, I don't think any of that really amounts to rape. It's a horrible and shitty thing to do, but the problem with your argument is that all forms of contraception (barring stuff like hysterectomies and physical castration, I guess) come with a chance of failing and resulting in pregnancy. Condoms, the pill, vasectomies, etc etc, they all have that slight chance of failure, which I honestly don't think is really communicated enough so most people aren't really aware.
This basically makes "safe" hetero sex a game of chance, with the "losers" getting pregnant if they're really unlucky. The consent was there, even if the people weren't educated that "safe" sex still had a chance of failing, so I don't think it would be fair to call it rape in any sense of the word (also seems a bit degrading to actual rape victims). Even if it did count as rape I don't think men should ever be the ones in control of what happens to a woman's body, considering abortion is generally a form of (very uncomfortable) surgery.
That being said, however, I do think men should have the right to sign away any rights and responsibilities to parenthood before the birth. For example, a dude has a one-night stand, the woman gets pregnant and wants to keep it, he would then be able to choose whether he wants to sign away all his rights as a biological father (so not having to pay child support, but also not being allowed access to the child), along with not being able to go back on it when the kid turns 18 so he can skip having to pay for it while still getting the benefit of, you know, being a parent.
Of course, there's many problems with that, not even counting whether you think that men should have to pay for their kids if it's a standard sexual encounter. Like how long would the guy have to debate it (since presumably his answer would also affect the woman's choice to keep the child), what if the dude can't be found, is it fair to make people make life-long decisions like that in <9 months, etc etc. I'm not sure it could ever become a real legal option due to the many problems with it. Complex issues suck, in other words.