Okay, but then it's like I said. Not breastfeeding is not a crime because there are other ways to feed a child. But not feeding a child is a crime. If there was no other ways to feed a child than breastfeeding it, then not breastfeeding it would be criminal, because not feeding your child is criminal.
You're being completely irrational in your thinking here, as it comes off to me. Your entire argument seem to be nothing but a huge false equivalency between the situations you are describing.
Breastfeeding was mostly just a poor example to use, to repeat that. There's other things where it's absolutely explicit, there's no or near no way for a kid to survive without some sort of blood, organ, or tissue donation from a parent or close family. We don't criminalize choosing not to do that. We don't even try to criminalize refusing to involve yourself in a medical procedure of that sort under basically any circumstance
except when it's a pregnant woman, even when the risk is minimal for the prospective donor or whatever.
I think Frumple’s position is that as pregnancy is a unique thing in that it requires the bodily resources and functions of a woman in order to actually work properly, and there’s no other thing like it outside the womb so it shouldn’t be treated like any other medical procedure.
It's not even really unique, though -- there's procedures that basically require two people to be hooked up together for a period for one of them to survive or otherwise heal, and beyond that anything in the general region of organ or blood donation fits in roughly the same category of action. It's just
treated differently than every damn thing else.
Most of what I'm trying to say is that if it's your intent to inflict unique burdens on pregnant women, you either
own that or you make it clear you
don't want that burden to be unique and start treating everything in the same general category of medical issues like you do pregnancy.
Mandatory blood, tissue, and organ donations could be a start. Conscript relevant people for applicable medical issues that requires another body if there's no volunteer. So on and so forth. Feel free to enforce hormone treatments on fathers if you really need the breastmilk, we've apparently more or less figured that one out and we're mostly pretty chill about parents going through lengthy hormone treatments to better care for young (we just let mothers' bodies pay the cost of it rather than insurance, ha).
Well, so far as the somewhat derailment goes. The initial bit was just noting that treating a fetus like a baby would actually reduce the burden of care beyond what was apparently intended. We (to be clear, the US in general -- I'm not trying to speak for other nations on this one, even if it's probably still applicable) just don't handle things outside the womb like we do things inside it, even so far as folks trying to consider things like friggin' heartbeat or breathing differently.