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Yes and no and it depends.
Take, for example, my much despised cousin. He thinks all forms of birth control should be banned. It is his firm belief that if you (by this, he specifically means the woman) choose to have sex, then you should take responsibility for the resulting pregnancy. This particular much despised cousin has two children by different mothers and is absolutely outraged beyond belief that he is expected to pay child support.
I see similar forms of hypocrisy on many issues, and not just among religious groups. YOU should take responsibility for YOUR actions, but I am not obligated to take similar responsibility for mine because (insert reason here). In religious groups, the reason tends to be 'because I am a member of X religion and thus responsible to X alone'. In logic and debates, this can be referred to as the special pleading fallacy. I often refer to it as 'someone should do something' syndrome. 'Someone should clean up this park', as the park-goer leaves their empty plastic bottle on the grass. 'Someone should clean up this beach' as the beach-goer tosses their cigarette butt into the sand. Somehow, it never falls to the person complaining that they are someone.
It's frustrating. I remember back where I grew up, there were complaints all over of the rampant graffiti. Letters were written to the newspaper, everyone complained around the water cooler. So some friends and I decided to volunteer to clean it up. We asked for donations to cover the materials we'd need to paint over or clean up the graffiti. All those complaints... we managed to raise enough money to repaint one part of the fence by city hall.
I guess that sort of thing is human nature. Governments in the West have gradually eroded the notion of personal responsibility by taking it over in many instances. On the other hand, some things perhaps should be a community responsibility in a civilised society. Where to draw the line?