Once again, slowly this time, a moral wrong does not necessarily rise to the level of a legal wrong. If it did, there would be many, many more lawsuits for all sorts of broken love promises (to get married, to live with her mother, to always live in one particular place, etc., etc., ad nausem).  
 
JB's paramour, mother of his child, lied. JB, on the other hand, could have availed himself of protection but chose not to based on her lie. That decision to not protect himself was his and his alone, unless she forced him or knocked him out and forcibly withdrew his sperm from his body. But condoms too can fail. The bottom line is that all sex carries the inherent and foreseeable risk of pregnancy. The fact that one or both parties have done everything humanly possible to reduce the risk, or that one party has been a liar, cannot get away from the inescapable and foreseeable risk.  
 
And telling a guy that he should have worn a condom is not analogous to telling a woman that she should have kept her legs closed. The former permits sexual expression while the latter would prohibit it. And it's basic biology here guys. No sperm, no pregnancy.  
 
Men have total control over the initiation of pregnancy. Now they want the government to give legal authority to control the outcome of pregnancy. It is bad enough that so many women have abortions because their male partner insists on it, or threatens to dump them and the child if she proceeds with the pregnancy. Now there are some men (led by the same lawyers that JB castigates) who are trying to abdicate their responsibilities that have resulted from the foreseeable results of their encounters. 
 
As if it isn't tragic enough that these same so-called men are bailing out on their own children, on fatherhood. Welcome to the brave new world of the anti-father (except when he decides). 
 
JB suggests putting some form of birth control in the water. Yes, mandatory medication of the entire populace. Draconian, but that's one way to defeat these women who go and get themselves pregnant. You know who those women are: the ones who plot and scheme to steal the sperm of a cash-earning male. Yes, women are a veritable Statue of Maternity, calling out to all those little sperm to come hither: 
 
Give me your active, your motile,
Your pent-up life force yearning to swim free,
Unfettered by latex and teeming to the female source,
Send these, the homeless sperm, racing boys to me,
I lift my hat to your golden coin! 
 
Perhaps a drug should be developed to prevent male fertility. Then, we could have a law that all males should be medicated at puberty to prevent their own fertility. In order to ensure responsible parenthood, males would be required to obtain a license to ejaculate (no learner's permits allowed). We could actually have a whole government agency to oversee this licensing and medication. This would create more jobs, hopefully for women so that they could find something else to do with their time other than contemplate ways to paternally trap hapless, unsheathed men. 
 
Constantly pointing a blaming finger at the woman continues the original pattern of irresponsibility and avoidance of personal responsibility for protection and potential outcome. No male should fail to protect himself from unintended pregnancies and STDs. Furthermore, even with multiple layers of birth control, pregnancies can and do occur. Just ask the couple that has tried unsuccessfully for years to get pregnant, the woman who has had multiple surgeries and IVF procedures. They decide to adopt and, in some cases, woman becomes pregnant.  
 
Here's a newsflash to the JBs of the world: There is a foreseeable risk of pregnancy collateral to having sex. You assumed that risk when you had sex, protected or not. Once that pregnancy occurs, the fetal life is intertwined with the mother's body and you no longer have any say over the fetus' journey to birth or its termination in utero. And once that fetus, or "collection of cells" (terminology compliments of Mel Feit, lawyer and founder of the Natl. Center for Men's Rights) is born, the rights of that child to support from its biological parents, those who caused its conception, supercede thes individual rights of the would-be nonparents. 
 
And please, JB, spare us all the ridiculous misuse of supposed statistics. This confusion of cause with effect is not only illogical but a hysterical, emotional response to something that you can't control.