Throwing virtual roses at Ishina's feet.
I get what you're saying, NY (by the way, if you're really in KSA, you're missing some cold and rainy weather back here), and it makes sense on the most simple level, but as was pointed out to you before, the devil is in the details. You have an appreciation for the emotions of both parties, but only superficially. The situation of the woman and the man in that early stage in question is
not the same. The demands are not the same. Both the man or the woman may decide they're glad this happened and they're ready for a child all the same, but everything else is worlds away, and this is what you're not fully accounting for.
Besides, let me ask you this: imagine I found out my birth control failed this month, and I was pregnant. I'm telling you right now that there's no way I'd want to keep the kid. In fact, I told that to my husband before we were even married. Kids are off the table, at the very least until I've got myself together, and graduated, and gotten rid of some of this student loan debt, gotten some stability. I'm not sure if I ever want one period. And he agreed.
Now, earlier this week, we found a particularly nasty woods-dwelling spider living in our shoe closet, and we could never catch him, and the husband started calling him "closet spider." When I finally got the opportunity to mash closet spider up real nice, I already kind of liked the disgusting little thing, and so I tried and failed to catch him again, and he's still at large.
So imagine I'm pregnant, just the early weeks, and the husband changes his mind and decides, no, you're having this kid. Too bad. Give him to me when you're done making him. It'll be like 9 months of inconvenience, and you'll be right back to normal. Let's pretend the 9 months flew by without complications, I got to keep doing my own thing, and my work and school performance didn't suffer one bit.
Considering my misplaced affection for a mindless creepy-crawly just because I had thought about him for too long, do you sincerely think that I'd have even the remotest chance of handing over the kid and signing away the rights after 9 months of my entire body doing what it was designed to do and making me feel attached to it? Do you think this would be easy and without consequence for most women to do? For a great deal of us, if we continue on with the pregnancy, our lives after will be irreparably changed. It just ain't as simple as you're making it sound.