Why is the USCCB so big on women working?

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Perhaps don’t agree with the statement that women shouldn’t be in jobs held traditionally by men (other than those requiring physical ability that few women possess) but I do agree that the change in traditional roles has been a huge disaster for children and families. Women have forged their way into the working world outside the home, taking on that breadwinner (traditionally male) role. and sadly some men particularly in certain communities have thus abdicated their role as provider and protector leaving our country with a massive percentage of single mothers without a male in the home to both provide for and protect his family. There are two words that describe the cause of poverty in this country “single mothers” and no that doesn’t mean they are bad people but the reality is that children raised in intact families with a mother and father married to each other are far less likely to be living off the rest of the taxpayers, dealing with drugs, teen pregnancies, and other unproductive behavior.

As a female who lived through “Women’s Lib” as they called it, I can assure you this movement bore evil fruits even if the intentions were noble. Males and females have different natures and when you force either into an unnatural way of life, it does not bring out the best in either sex. We are now plagued with a bastion of irresponsible sperm donors, women who do not have the financial or emotional reserves to provide a good environment for raising children and the poor children who are dragged through the parents’ chaotic lives. And before the onslaught of “well my mom was single and she was a saint” begins, I am talking about the average situation, not the exception. The statistics are clear. “Breadwinner mom” and no father is a recipe for poverty. Women being expected to work, and they are these days, has completely changed the way children grow up in this country. Free love, free sex, do what feels good have created some of the evil fruits previously described. Women being “liberated” from the ‘chains’ of taking care of their families to go out and earn money has only made them over worked, over tired and overwhelmed.

Lisa
Lisa, I’d hire you to do Public Relations work for me, but, well, you know…
😛

Husband who marvels at his wife’s ability to keep things steady while he is at work, and all associated with it- despite it not necessarily being the most glamorous life VS insulting pay structure, sexual harassment increase, etc.

I just don’t understand the desire to submit oneself to the latter in lieu of the former. 🤷
 
Perhaps don’t agree with the statement that women shouldn’t be in jobs held traditionally by men (other than those requiring physical ability that few women possess) but I do agree that the change in traditional roles has been a huge disaster for children and families. Women have forged their way into the working world outside the home, taking on that breadwinner (traditionally male) role. and sadly some men particularly in certain communities have thus abdicated their role as provider and protector leaving our country with a massive percentage of single mothers without a male in the home to both provide for and protect his family. There are two words that describe the cause of poverty in this country “single mothers” and no that doesn’t mean they are bad people but the reality is that children raised in intact families with a mother and father married to each other are far less likely to be living off the rest of the taxpayers, dealing with drugs, teen pregnancies, and other unproductive behavior.

As a female who lived through “Women’s Lib” as they called it, I can assure you this movement bore evil fruits even if the intentions were noble. Males and females have different natures and when you force either into an unnatural way of life, it does not bring out the best in either sex. We are now plagued with a bastion of irresponsible sperm donors, women who do not have the financial or emotional reserves to provide a good environment for raising children and the poor children who are dragged through the parents’ chaotic lives. And before the onslaught of “well my mom was single and she was a saint” begins, I am talking about the average situation, not the exception. The statistics are clear. “Breadwinner mom” and no father is a recipe for poverty. Women being expected to work, and they are these days, has completely changed the way children grow up in this country. Free love, free sex, do what feels good have created some of the evil fruits previously described. Women being “liberated” from the ‘chains’ of taking care of their families to go out and earn money has only made them over worked, over tired and overwhelmed.

Lisa
Well-said. I would put in my two cents’ worth:

The intentions of ‘women’s liberation’ were never noble. The snake did it once, he tried again, succeeded brilliantly in destroying the family unit.
 
Well-said. I would put in my two cents’ worth:

The intentions of ‘women’s liberation’ were never noble. The snake did it once, he tried again, succeeded brilliantly in destroying the family unit.
I agree. I highly doubt the majority of 40% of all women who having babies outside of marriage and the 70% of black women in particular having babies outside of marriage feel “liberated”.
 
Well-said. I would put in my two cents’ worth:

The intentions of ‘women’s liberation’ were never noble. The snake did it once, he tried again, succeeded brilliantly in destroying the family unit.
Good point. I think there were some sincerely well intentioned people who saw this as giving the same kind of freedom to women that the Civil Rights movement provided to blacks. Women got freedom all right…freedom to kill their babies, freedom to be exposed to STDs, to be used by irresponsible men who were never held to a higher standard and the freedom to be tossed aside like a used tissue. The children are the casualties of this war. We should ask better of both sexes but it’s not politically correct is it?

Lisa
 
I would have just thought that, since family is one of their biggest concerns, they’d voice some sort of supportive of 1 working parent per family.

I think it that would also help alleviate the massive disparity between wealthy and poor families. If fewer people were in the job market, there’d be more jobs available. Family A has 2 working parents, while Family B has 0 working parents. What if each family had 1 working parent? Family A wouldn’t be as wealthy, and Family B wouldn’t be as poor. Obviously the children of these families would reap the biggest rewards.
Hmmm…sounds a little socialist there in the second paragraph. But anyway, to answer your question…

I’ve never found that the USCCB is big on women working. They’ve encouraged women and minorities getting equal pay as men for the same jobs because that’s fair and just, but I haven’t noticed them pushing for more women working. What I have noticed is the USCCB is big for keeping families together and families in general. It is for whatever will accomplish that and the traditional view of marriage (man and woman). So no, the USCCB doesn’t really favor women or men working.
 
Of course women have always worked in various regards, they even claim one of the oldest professions! Are you suggesting I’m positing that some spinsters parents take care of her? No, she should get a job. I’m solely discussing married with children and chasing careers, not some part-time job when the school-age children are off to school. Nor am I discussing what women have done during extraordinary times. The point is, stay at home mothers have the ability to work, and with the internet, certain jobs are easy to get as a telecommuter: a total win-win!

The women’s liberation/feminism movement, inspired by a totally out of context understanding of the Rosie the Riveter Icon and all associated workers therein, is what started, along with the hippie movement (which goes back to the underground movements of the earlier generations), the downfall of the American society. Fact.

I’m not suggesting the Church or even society should have a problem with women working, I am merely expressing the reality that family life was a lot better off overall before this influx of women into the workforce in positions men have always traditionally held. I mean seriously. All it does is create more competition for jobs where none need be. When the need for jobs creates industry, it’s often somehow tax-funded and doomed to failure. When industry creates jobs, they will be filled.

Any parent that is going to let their impressionable youngster be exposed to adults and their insane ideas about life, religion, etc as authority figures- assuming they don’t use a known Catholic party for this- is an outright idiot in this day and age. Especially for kids who wouldn’t normally be in school during the day due to their young age. I’m not even happy about the government forcing public school on people via taxation without the ability to use a school voucher or get a return for homeschooling outside of standardized test-administration cost.

As per St. Gianna, she had a ministry calling obviously. Should I lobby for Catholic women who are healthcare professionals to suck the pus out of wounds of patients because St. Catherine of Siena did it? Come on. I’m talking in general here and you have one example of a Saint who had a completely different station in life than most.

Why, I wonder, do women feel this crazy need to have a job, any job, when it leads to nothing but more stress or cost to offset the stress?

I’m talking good of society and family, feelings aren’t even in the top 3. And all I’m reading is feelings and examples flailing to grasp a root.

Excellent, you were self-taught(?*) on life skills. *That’s a parent’s job. My mom, the stay at home one, took me in the laundry room and said, “here’s how you wash your own clothes, don’t break my washer”, and went to doing other things with her newly open minutes. Dad, similarly, said, “this is how you do X, don’t break my tools”, and expected me to be self-sufficient by following instructions.

Per the stay-at-home concubines (they certainly aren’t acting like mothers!), that’s obviously bad parenting. I’m not espousing bad parenting, so, what does this have to do with anything pertinent other than the failings of a woman to do her parental duties? Same type of person is the reason affirmative-action hired Federal employees are such a poor example of workers- almost impossible to get fired. The stay-at-home mom knows she can’t get fired per se, so, it is easier to become lazy. Friends are easier to hang out with than children who must submit to parental authority, so they make friends of their children and then wonder why they have smart mouths and/or are outright disrespectful.

Per the OP title, I’d say this: the USCCB isn’t big or little on women working. I doubt they have an opinion in the extreme of either way. However, the USCCB cannot, in its PC-right mind, come out and say women shouldn’t work in general/at all (nor am I saying this), as the actual (complex) social/moral teaching on such an issue would become so convoluted in controversy that pretty soon, sensational headlines such as “Perpetual Slaves!? USCCB Hates Women!” would appear. If 100, or even 50 years ago, you heard someone say a mother should be at home, the response would likely result in a comment analogous to the obvious lack of fecal matter in the direction of Sherlock. Now? The culture has changed, and with it, the family.

I will say this: Dad’s shed didn’t get burned down when mom was at home. 🤷
There is NO reason to be rude about this, now is there? You are rather new to CAF and being arrogant and condescending to others just because they hold a different view or post something you happen to disagree with is against forum rules. Please don’t be so sarcastic with others just because they don’t agree with what you’ve posted.
 
Participants are strongly reminded that charity is essential to our discussions here.

If you wish to review the subject, please see Charity for specifics, or CAF rules for an overview, both of which are located in the Rules of the Road sub-forum.

Thank you for your cooperation.
 
I hope people today can realize that, just like the USSR, our economic problems today are not actually under-employment but over-employment. There’s simply not enough work to go around, which means hyper-consumerism becomes necessary to artificially drive up demand. All the G20’s various stimulus packages have been aimed at artificially generating demand. Hyper-consumerism also of course encourages debt accumulation that destroys real wealth and converts wealth into liability. That is extremely communistic in effect, even if no one intended it to be.

There’s no shortage of people who would gladly work more hours, for example. The problem is that there’s not enough demand to justify the added production.

Consider that as women were added to the workforce in droves following the '60’s, nonetheless GDP did not increase by rapid proportions. If the workforce increased by 25% as a result of added employment, we did not see a 25% increase in overall GDP. This is, of course, counter-intuitive.

Notice also that health care is the number one and fastest increasing social liability society has. It went from consuming 6 or 7% of GDP in the early sixties to being closer to 18% today. That is an enormous increase in the span of one generation. But let’s be honest, what is largely to blame for bad health? Stress and poor diet. Now when both parents work the duties at home become more, not less, difficult to manage. Who makes the kids’ breakfasts, lunches and diner? Who drives them to school and picks them up? Who helps them with their homework? Who gets them to sport practice (exercise)? Who makes sure the school and teachers are doing their job? Etc.

The Christian wife and mother was and is a blessing to her family in many respects. She was at liberty to ensure the welfare of her family in the most vital areas of concern: both their bodily and even their mental health (for example). By her effort a house truly became a home, which from a psychological perspective is enormously important for the healthy socialization of children and young people, for example. It stabilized not only the children but everyone in the household and provided a sense of belonging and orderliness. By dividing responsibilities it allowed people to concentrate on their respective duties or responsibilities fully without having excessive concern over a litany of other things.

We went from an economy in the '50’s and '60’s where average Joe worker earned enough with his salary or wage for at least the equivalent of a small, modest house and a vehicle, whilst saving for retirement and college for his children. Today two working parents struggle to provide the necessities for even their smaller family. There’s something seriously wrong here.

Now I don’t mean to imply this was a consequence of women working per se. A lot of it was and is a direct consequence of terrible economic management and policy on part of the authorities. Still, the depravation of the household of ‘mom’ and ‘wife’ as such left a vacuum that in many ways the government now must try to fulfill for everyone. Hence we deal more and more with Big Mommy government.

Christians should be content in life with the things necessary to live a dignified life. If we give-in to hyper-consumerism we risk serving mammom as our idol. Far better it is to have a happy, peaceful home than a mansion of chaos and misery. Government has a duty to strive to make the former way of life as feasible as possible and to protect it.
 
There is NO reason to be rude about this, now is there? You are rather new to CAF and being arrogant and condescending to others just because they hold a different view or post something you happen to disagree with is against forum rules. Please don’t be so sarcastic with others just because they don’t agree with what you’ve posted.
Feel free to counter the argument. Rude? I see no rudeness in asserting my position with conviction in light of emotional argumentation. So far the only counter argument is truly emotionally based and seeks to validate the current family deterioration at large because of personal experience, and without consideration of historical truth regarding gender roles.

I suspect my own gender plays into this perception of yours, though LisaA didn’t seem to disagree. She a, to paraphrase a common saying against dissenting blacks, “house wife”? If I was a woman, would you disagree so vehemently in this regard? I’d hope so, for consistency sake.

The thread is ridiculous anyway because it’s like saying, “Why is the USCCB so big on X” when the USCCB ain’t gonna give an opinion either way on X that is construable to be outside of popular opinion when the explanation would be so intense and detailed that it would amount to a sociological study more than moral. No way this would happen. This isn’t even a moral issue until it becomes one.

People are up in arms about contraception and abortion- two historically undeniable Catholic positions. Does one think the USCCB would be dumb enough to put itself in the feminists’ crosshairs for a reason that is more a question of society than Church teaching? A social issue which only has corollary associations to the fruits of moral means?

Is dissenting discussion not allowed unless one pats heads and says everyone is special and right in their own unique and respected way?

I’ll just bow out and let the women fight this battle who can speak their piece without being labeled rude where no rudeness exists.
 
Good point. I think there were some sincerely well intentioned people who saw this as giving the same kind of freedom to women that the Civil Rights movement provided to blacks. Women got freedom all right…freedom to kill their babies, freedom to be exposed to STDs, to be used by irresponsible men who were never held to a higher standard and the freedom to be tossed aside like a used tissue. The children are the casualties of this war. We should ask better of both sexes but it’s not politically correct is it?

Lisa
👍 Is this a charitable emoticon? Rude? Gender-neutral?
👍👍👍👍👍👍
 
…In modern times, we have had economic success to the point where mother was able to stay at home and stir the stew …
Ignorant and insulting characterization of the lives of stay home moms! I happen to know my wife would laugh heartily at this description, right before knocking your teeth out.

Women have always worked, whether at home or away. But it has only been in the last 70 years or so that “working” has meant getting in the car and leaving ones children with a stranger for 9.5 hours a day. IMO, NOT a healthy development.

Sure, there were situations of grinding poverty in which that may have been the case even in the past. But those were still ‘modern’ inventions. Prior to the industrial revolution the idea of a sweatshop didn’t exist. If you worked in a sweatshop back then it was either yours or you were the apprentice!
 
Why, I wonder, do women feel this crazy need to have a job, any job, when it leads to nothing but more stress or cost to offset the stress?

I’m talking good of society and family, feelings aren’t even in the top 3. And all I’m reading is feelings and examples flailing to grasp a root.

Excellent, you were self-taught(?*) on life skills. *That’s a parent’s job. My mom, the stay at home one, took me in the laundry room and said, “here’s how you wash your own clothes, don’t break my washer”, and went to doing other things with her newly open minutes. Dad, similarly, said, “this is how you do X, don’t break my tools”, and expected me to be self-sufficient by following instructions.

Per the stay-at-home concubines (they certainly aren’t acting like mothers!), that’s obviously bad parenting. I’m not espousing bad parenting, so, what does this have to do with anything pertinent other than the failings of a woman to do her parental duties? Same type of person is the reason affirmative-action hired Federal employees are such a poor example of workers- almost impossible to get fired. The stay-at-home mom knows she can’t get fired per se, so, it is easier to become lazy. Friends are easier to hang out with than children who must submit to parental authority, so they make friends of their children and then wonder why they have smart mouths and/or are outright disrespectful.

Per the OP title, I’d say this: the USCCB isn’t big or little on women working. I doubt they have an opinion in the extreme of either way. However, the USCCB cannot, in its PC-right mind, come out and say women shouldn’t work in general/at all (nor am I saying this), as the actual (complex) social/moral teaching on such an issue would become so convoluted in controversy that pretty soon, sensational headlines such as “Perpetual Slaves!? USCCB Hates Women!” would appear. If 100, or even 50 years ago, you heard someone say a mother should be at home, the response would likely result in a comment analogous to the obvious lack of fecal matter in the direction of Sherlock. Now? The culture has changed, and with it, the family.

I will say this: Dad’s shed didn’t get burned down when mom was at home. 🤷
What the example of the inattentive stay-at-home mom’s was meant to illustrate is that fact that a good mom is a good mom regardless of whether or not she has a job, just as a bad mom is a bad mom regardless of whether or not she stays at home. While I can agree that there has been an unfortunate decline in family life of late, I don’t see how you’ve managed to come to the conclusion that it’s because the mother is working a job. A precursory look at the life of the average American child will tell you that it isn’t a lack of a mother that is causing the problem. It’s the lack of a father. How many children do you know who don’t have their mother with them? Probably very few. But over half of the nation’s children are living in homes without their biological father. People seem to think that all a father has to do to fullfill his obligation is hand mom a check once a month. THis attitude is even demonstrated in some households where the parents are still married to each other. “You can take the children to the birthday party, dear, I’m going to play golf.” If you ask me, this is the real root of the problem.

As to your question about why women want a job, well there’s the obvious reason that they think their children might get hungry sometime. Assuming there is enough money from their husband’s job that it isn’t entirely neccesary, they may want to maintain a career in case their husband suddenly loses income. (For example, if he works in a career that sees frequent layoffs of decreases in business.) Perhaps, her husband has a calling to a profession that doesn’t provide the necessary income or benefits needed to run a household. (Like a Catholic school Spanish teacher, a Deacon, or an employee of a non-for-profit organization that does important work but can’t afford to pay very much.) Presuming that there is no need whatsoever for her to work, there is also the possibility that she has a calling to a certain profession. Perhaps she feels that her work is making the world a better place.

And for what it’s worth, I didn’t really think you were being rude… just very, very wrong. Also, I don’t know how you expect to have this discusion without emotion, since we are trying to determine the emotional value of a mother who stays at home all day as opposed to one who works. (I’m presuming that you are with me on that at least and you aren’t one of these nuts who manages to operate on the delusion that even a notable percentage of children of working mothers go around dirty, naked, illiterate, and unfed.)
 
Because a one-working-parent-family is a recent development of the modern world and only exists in the wealthiest nations. In agricultural societies, women worked their farms along with their husbands. In industrial communities, children stayed home with older children, disabled aunties and grandmothers, or went to work along side their mothers in the factory. Non-working mothers are the creation of the upper class and upper middle class. Poor families have always required both parents to work in order to make ends meet. In modern times, we have had economic success to the point where mother was able to stay at home and stir the stew while dad went to the office, but this is not the norm throughout history.
Honestly do not think that women working outside the home was the norm in the past. Certainly young, unmarried women often worked. But once married, and certainly after having children, women transitioned to being homemakers or some kind of work in the home. I’m from a family of career women but until my mom’s generation they only worked until marriage.

My mother always worked but trust me, it was an anomoly in the 1950s thru 1970s. The only mothers who worked while I was growing up were from broken homes with absent fathers. Some women went back after the children were in school all day and others had work at home. One of my babysitters took in ironing and while we roamed around the neighborhood she sat at the mangle ironing men’s white shirts. But the vast majority of my schoolmates had stay at home moms. Everything was a 'one" except they almost all had two parents…married to each other what a concept! They also lived with one car, one TV set, one two week vacation at the beach every year and shared one bathroom. Homes were a fraction of the current size. Dinner out was the church spaghetti feed. Women didn’t ‘need’ to work with that kind of lifestyle. To some extent we have created the ‘need’ for both parents to work what with large homes, electronics, multiple cars, dinners out several nights a week, children’s activities. Broken homes and single (never married) mothers have also contributed to the number of women in the workplace. Intact families cost a lot less to maintain than two sets of parents maintaining two homes.

As an economic and social unit, I really don’t think you can beat the traditional family structure and quite honestly, doing a good job of raising responsible citizens seems like a far higher calling than the vast majority of jobs.
Lisa
 
Ignorant and insulting characterization of the lives of stay home moms! I happen to know my wife would laugh heartily at this description, right before knocking your teeth out.

Women have always worked, whether at home or away. But it has only been in the last 70 years or so that “working” has meant getting in the car and leaving ones children with a stranger for 9.5 hours a day. IMO, NOT a healthy development.

Sure, there were situations of grinding poverty in which that may have been the case even in the past. But those were still ‘modern’ inventions. Prior to the industrial revolution the idea of a sweatshop didn’t exist. If you worked in a sweatshop back then it was either yours or you were the apprentice!
I’m sorry if you found “stirring the stew” to be demeaning in some way. I happen to like stew. It certainly wasn’t my intention to suggest that stew-making was all stay-at-home mom’s do. I’m aware of the fact that they have many things to do. I’m also aware that the same things get done in the households of working mothers as well. I don’t think your charactorization of the situation of most working mothers is fair at all. First of all, almost no one leaves their children with a stranger. Most people go to great efforts to make certain that their children are getting good care. Many parents of very small children have family members or close friends who watch their children. Still others alternate their work schedules with their spouses so that the children don’t have to be left with anyone, or perhaps only have to be babysat a couple of days a week. Of course, many families are able to make it so a parent is at home when the children are too young for school, and then both return to work when the children are school age. There are many alternatives to institutionalizing an infant in a daycare center.
 
I certainly hope you are being tongue-in-cheek and not presenting this story as evidence of your claim. The woman in this story isn’t acting this way because she’s over-concerned about her job! This woman is a nut! She is an abusive tyrant who gets her jollies off of torturing her little girl. This is no more a reasonable representation of a woman who is too taken up with her job than the lady who murdered all her children in the bathtub is a reasonable representation of stay-at-home moms.
 
Honestly do not think that women working outside the home was the norm in the past. Certainly young, unmarried women often worked. But once married, and certainly after having children, women transitioned to being homemakers or some kind of work in the home. I’m from a family of career women but until my mom’s generation they only worked until marriage.

My mother always worked but trust me, it was an anomoly in the 1950s thru 1970s. The only mothers who worked while I was growing up were from broken homes with absent fathers. Some women went back after the children were in school all day and others had work at home. One of my babysitters took in ironing and while we roamed around the neighborhood she sat at the mangle ironing men’s white shirts. But the vast majority of my schoolmates had stay at home moms. Everything was a 'one" except they almost all had two parents…married to each other what a concept! They also lived with one car, one TV set, one two week vacation at the beach every year and shared one bathroom. Homes were a fraction of the current size. Dinner out was the church spaghetti feed. Women didn’t ‘need’ to work with that kind of lifestyle. To some extent we have created the ‘need’ for both parents to work what with large homes, electronics, multiple cars, dinners out several nights a week, children’s activities. Broken homes and single (never married) mothers have also contributed to the number of women in the workplace. Intact families cost a lot less to maintain than two sets of parents maintaining two homes.

As an economic and social unit, I really don’t think you can beat the traditional family structure and quite honestly, doing a good job of raising responsible citizens seems like a far higher calling than the vast majority of jobs.
Lisa
Historically speaking, that is not the case. The 50’s saw the rise of enough of a middle class that we could say “most woman didn’t work”. Even then, woman from lower socio-economic situation worked. If they lived in the country, they did farm work. If they lived in the city, they cleaned houses and worked on factory lines. Prior to that era, it was only the upper-middle class and wealthiest families that could afford for the mother not to work at all. Keep in mind that many families owned family businesses. I suppose you could argue that the woman in those cases weren’t getting into cars and driving away, but they weren’t in the house watching the children either.
 
And for what it’s worth, I didn’t really think you were being rude… just very, very wrong. Also, I don’t know how you expect to have this discusion without emotion, since we are trying to determine the emotional value of a mother who stays at home all day as opposed to one who works. (I’m presuming that you are with me on that at least and you aren’t one of these nuts who manages to operate on the delusion that even a notable percentage of children of working mothers go around dirty, naked, illiterate, and unfed.)
Allegra,

I would just like to say thank you for the back up on the “rude” comment.

I didn’t see where I was being rude either.

Per emotion, emotion is good and is ALWAYS present in any rhetoric, but the emotion cannot rule the argument. Nor can it serve the argument via one-off examples of a single saint, and to be honest (we’ve both done this), anecdotes. Though the personal anecdotal things can certainly provide a background of information to understand the POV.

Historical trends, associated reasons for the flux in those trends, etc… that would be more interesting than everyone’s personal story about being a latchkey kid or coming home to mom.

Fromm’s ideas on the encouragement/rise of Matriarchal societal shift IS to bring about a less rational society as in this whole scheme, while society is being feminized, morality is crumbling. The Patriarchal society is what Fromm identified as leading to the Capitalist/Bourgeois societal model: uta.edu/huma/illuminations/kell8.htm

I’m well aware of the difference between correcting prejudice and thrusting society on its head via the “emotional appeal” of correcting prejudice for ulterior means. I’ve been involved in planning both on multiple levels of locality. We do it every day, actually. The means used to accomplish this, as we see now, are bearing bad fruit. Socialism is seeping in via the emotional and irrational society we now have. We have a feminine society and Karl Marx loooooooves us, so we shall soon elope against the will of our Fathers.

Thing thing is, women ARE very capable of doing MANY things. I hope you don’t think I’m some low-browed insurance commercial reject. The issue of “feeding her kids”, if she is still married and husband has a job, really means, “learn to live within means better”.

Most Americans, almost all in fact, do NOT live within their means. They live above their means through the smokescreen illusion of credit, and thus, debt.

We’re not addressing specific examples of a single portion of society. We’re addressing society.

Now back to Lisa to say the same thing and not get yelled at for it.🙂
 
I can’t even read all of the posts on this thread because they are infuriating. Women are multi-talented and have and are making great contributions to the workforce. Its insulting to say that women should not work outside of the home implying that their contributions are unneccessary. Its equaly insulting to belittle stay at home moms. I certainly don’t have it all figured out but some posters arrogantly think they do.

People love to knock feminism. Feminism is the belief that men and women are equal (wow what a crazy demonic idea). Feminism gave women the right to vote and equal pay for equal work. It brought us radical ideas like women are as smart as men and you can’t rape your wife.

The sexual revoloution on the other hand seems to be the root of many of the problems that people are blaming on feminism. And the blame for that can be equally spread around.
 
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