Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What a bizarre final comment you make about marriage. How does being alone help women??
Well, as a single mom making $300, I can guarantee I have far less arguments about how I’m spending my money or child raising decisions than 99.9% of married people. (Not, op).
You’re quoting me. I make far more than you (biglaw) and also have a happy marriage to a man who makes even more.
I don’t think my income makes me special but since you seem to think yours does…
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What a bizarre final comment you make about marriage. How does being alone help women??
Well, as a single mom making $300, I can guarantee I have far less arguments about how I’m spending my money or child raising decisions than 99.9% of married people. (Not, op).
Well, I certainly don't want the tragic life of raising a kid in a single family. I am in a happy marriage with a man who is a great dad. I could never imagine depriving my child of his dad. I also have the security that if some thing happens to me, my children still have my husband. Maybe you chose a loser to father your child.
Your anecdata about financial issues with a partner speaks volumes about the kind of family you were raised in. Sorry, but many people were not raised in dysfunctional families.
You are such an idiot. My mom's father was killed in the war while my grandmother was pregnant. My classmate died of leukemia and left 2 kids behind. Better to be a single mom than have a loser mom like you.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What a bizarre final comment you make about marriage. How does being alone help women??
Well, as a single mom making $300, I can guarantee I have far less arguments about how I’m spending my money or child raising decisions than 99.9% of married people. (Not, op).
Well, I certainly don't want the tragic life of raising a kid in a single family. I am in a happy marriage with a man who is a great dad. I could never imagine depriving my child of his dad. I also have the security that if some thing happens to me, my children still have my husband. Maybe you chose a loser to father your child.
Your anecdata about financial issues with a partner speaks volumes about the kind of family you were raised in. Sorry, but many people were not raised in dysfunctional families.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What a bizarre final comment you make about marriage. How does being alone help women??
Well, as a single mom making $300, I can guarantee I have far less arguments about how I’m spending my money or child raising decisions than 99.9% of married people. (Not, op).
You’re quoting me. I make far more than you (biglaw) and also have a happy marriage to a man who makes even more.
I don’t think my income makes me special but since you seem to think yours does…
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What a bizarre final comment you make about marriage. How does being alone help women??
Well, as a single mom making $300, I can guarantee I have far less arguments about how I’m spending my money or child raising decisions than 99.9% of married people. (Not, op).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What a bizarre final comment you make about marriage. How does being alone help women??
Well, as a single mom making $300, I can guarantee I have far less arguments about how I’m spending my money or child raising decisions than 99.9% of married people. (Not, op).
I live in McLean and I never run into women like you.
Because you are old and live in one of those old ranchers. There are plenty of successful, single moms at Longfellow making this or more. For those who can't imagine a woman in her 30s making a high salary, you need to leave Woodbridge more. A 25 year old computer system engineer makes around 200K. A lawyer makes at least 300K. I'm a fed at a fin agency and I make over 200K. My single friend at Amazon makes 400. My H is a VP of sales in biotech and his top sales person is a woman in Atlanta making 600K.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I love how those nuts bring teen pregnancy rates in discussion. Teen pregnancy rates are at a historic lows and represent a minuscule number of live births. I'm more concerned about the SAH, religious breeders who keep popping tons of kids until their uterus is at their knees. Those are the problem, not successful single moms.
Why do these successful single women need to pop out a kid at all? Why not be happy and childless? Why not be happy with their career? Why choose loser men to have children with?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What a bizarre final comment you make about marriage. How does being alone help women??
Well, as a single mom making $300, I can guarantee I have far less arguments about how I’m spending my money or child raising decisions than 99.9% of married people. (Not, op).
Well, I certainly don't want the tragic life of raising a kid in a single family. I am in a happy marriage with a man who is a great dad. I could never imagine depriving my child of his dad. I also have the security that if some thing happens to me, my children still have my husband. Maybe you chose a loser to father your child.
Your anecdata about financial issues with a partner speaks volumes about the kind of family you were raised in. Sorry, but many people were not raised in dysfunctional families.
You are such an idiot. My mom's father was killed in the war while my grandmother was pregnant. My classmate died of leukemia and left 2 kids behind. Better to be a single mom than have a loser mom like you.
Were they married at that time? One baby mama or baby daddy or multiples? Yeah, this sucks. But not they are not single mothers. They are widowed mothers.
Anonymous wrote:I don’t understand the point of this article. The thesis seems to be that it’s not that men used to prefer wives with lower income jobs - it’s just that they didn’t have enough professional women around to marry. Okay, so?
Anonymous wrote:I love how those nuts bring teen pregnancy rates in discussion. Teen pregnancy rates are at a historic lows and represent a minuscule number of live births. I'm more concerned about the SAH, religious breeders who keep popping tons of kids until their uterus is at their knees. Those are the problem, not successful single moms.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What a bizarre final comment you make about marriage. How does being alone help women??
Well, as a single mom making $300, I can guarantee I have far less arguments about how I’m spending my money or child raising decisions than 99.9% of married people. (Not, op).
Well, I certainly don't want the tragic life of raising a kid in a single family. I am in a happy marriage with a man who is a great dad. I could never imagine depriving my child of his dad. I also have the security that if some thing happens to me, my children still have my husband. Maybe you chose a loser to father your child.
Your anecdata about financial issues with a partner speaks volumes about the kind of family you were raised in. Sorry, but many people were not raised in dysfunctional families.
You are such an idiot. My mom's father was killed in the war while my grandmother was pregnant. My classmate died of leukemia and left 2 kids behind. Better to be a single mom than have a loser mom like you.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What a bizarre final comment you make about marriage. How does being alone help women??
Well, as a single mom making $300, I can guarantee I have far less arguments about how I’m spending my money or child raising decisions than 99.9% of married people. (Not, op).
I’m a sahm. My Dh earns seven figures. We don’t have any arguments about money and I make the majority of the decisions about the kids.
Don’t you have to check with your ex about your kids? Or is there no dad at all???
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What a bizarre final comment you make about marriage. How does being alone help women??
Well, as a single mom making $300, I can guarantee I have far less arguments about how I’m spending my money or child raising decisions than 99.9% of married people. (Not, op).