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Relationship Discussion (non-explicit)
DP. A panel of experts couldn't convince me a woman wrote this stupidity. |
Do you have sons or daughters? I have daughters so obviously I am grateful they now have the choice on whether they want to get married or not. I’m grateful they can earn their own money so they aren’t tethered to a bad man. We spend a lot of time talking about the behavior of boys in their class and men that we know, and I teach them how to spot the red flags and what they mean. Above everything I want them to be happy. If that means marriage, great. If it doesn’t, that’s fine, too. I don’t want either to feel like they HAVE to get married and have kids, like I did. Now, boy parents are different from what I’ve observed. Their parents ARE worried because they know their sons want a relationship and really needs a mommy figure to take care of their little boy, and nobody wants them. But rather than self-reflect on why they raised their son to be entitled and useless, they want to trap a woman. It’s pretty disgusting. |
I'm the PP with the bitter, lonely, single BIL and might agree with this. If men like this could be satisfied with a relationship with some kind of AI, it genuinely might ease a burden on everyone else. Especially if that robot could also provide care to him in his old age, which is one of the major problems with people like this who struggle to hold down jobs and can't create relationships -- they have no resources for old age and wind up in depressing facilities willing to take Medicare and no one to visit them. If AI could solve that problem, that would actually be great. |
Ok. You're just arguing without facts now. You must be very young and very single |
+1000 For the life of me, I can't figure out who will possibly lose when the misogynists, sexual harassers, pedophiles, domestic abusers and other unfit males of the world go inflict themselves on robots. A man who would rather have a robot than be in a mutually beneficial and equal relationship with a woman is the EXACT kind of man who needs to be with a robot. I say sex robots should be publicly funded for anyone who wants one as a thank you for removing themselves from the dating pool. |
+1, another mother of a daughter here and I am very grateful for the opportunities my daughter now has that were not available to my mom or grandmother. But I see what the PP might be saying about boys. I actually think it's a hard time to raise a boy. I don't think this is the fault of feminism, but more the fault of the backlash to feminism. There are so many forces seeking to convince young men that feminism and the modern world are out to get them, that everything would be better for them if we could just turn back the clock 80 years, and that women and feminism and "liberals" are the reason they can't find jobs or are not happy in relationships. It's deeply toxic and I really feel for parents with sons who have to fight that to try and turn their sons into functional people with a shot at happiness. I hope they figure it out because my DD talks about wanting to have a family someday, and I know it will be easiest for her if she can create that family with a good man. I hope there are good men. |
NP. Every generation of women has been less happy than their mothers since the 70s. The women people keep describing as hostages were, statistically, happier than their grandchildren with the free choice. That obviously doesn't mean that feminism is bad or that we should undo it (which we can't), but it's also something that I don't think people in this conversation are really acknowledging. As someone with a daughter, I'm concerned about that, even as I think feminism has been, on balance a good thing. |
I am the PP who wrote that and I have sons and a daughter. The future seems bleak for them. It's weird there are a bunch of Pollyannas in this thread ignoring all the warning signals. |
Exactly. I'm the mom of a 12 year old boy whom I taught to cook, clean, do laundry, and take initiative on household responsibilities. He's also a straight A student, very into physical fitness and healthy eating, opens doors, rushes to lift heavy items for women, and dotes on his sister and I. Unlike most parents of sons, I've approached my son's upbringing the same way I've approached my daughter's upbringing: as training to be a fully contributing member of a family, rather than a lord waiting to be served when he gets home. I'm not in the least bit worried about his relationship prospects. In fact, he already stands out starkly in comparison to his video game addict peers. They're making it easy for him to be the favorite of all his female classmates, even though I caution him that it's too early to date or think of romance. |
Which aspect of feminism are you suggesting it’s in my daughter’s best interest to roll back? The laws that keep her from being raped by her future spouse? The legal right to leave her marriage? The right to have medical treatment without her husband’s permission? Truly what am I supposed to be worrying about for her? |
Raise a son who is worthy of an equal spouse and it’s not bleak. All of my friends with sons know the game has changed and there isn’t going to be some wife to do the dishes and maintain the relationship for him, so they’re teaching those skills now. |
I don't know about your daughter but I'm worried for my daughter's future. I don't think the dating pool full of eligible men is going to be vast because all the young men will have shaped up due to feminism. She will be lucky to find someone and the odds are more likely she will stay single. I guess she could have kids but being a single working mom is no picnic and nothing one should aspire to. |
+1 |
The dishes are the least of my concerns. What kind of jobs will be available to our sons and daughters in 10 years? |
You know the old generations of women you're referring to are still alive, right? Clearly, you don't talk to your female relatives (probably because they might say something inconvenient for your false narrative about the good old days). Those of us who talk to our grandmothers, grand aunts, and elderly women in our communities have heard all the horrible stories. Even among those who had decent husbands, not a single one would have married when she did and most would not have married whom they did if they had the choices we do today. There are so many heartbreaking stories of being forced to quit jobs at which they were succeeding, being fired when of "marriageable age," being denied an equal education, being impregnated against their will (rape!), and otherwise being forced into financial dependence and how that shaped their entire lives. Ferk you and your lies. We're showing you the middle fingers our grandmothers wish they could have waved. |