Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Most fathers are indeed part time fathers in practical sense.
Yeah. I have been told this during job interviews.
“You can be a father and do this job, but do you really think you can do it as a mother?”
I don’t know what to say about this except that it’s kind of true.
Anonymous wrote:A good number of parents don't see their kids from 7-7, its not full time parenting, no matter how you define it.
Anonymous wrote:If working moms are indeed raising kids then why childcare industry is worth trillions and why millions work in childcare?
There is no shame in admitting that some women prefer or have to raise children and others don't. If fathers fan have options, why can't mothers?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I hate such stupid questions.
Not all women are mothers. Not all mothers want to stay home. Those mothers that do want to stay home, still can.
+1
Now you have the choice - which was the power we gained. No, I don’t think we should give that up.
It’s a choice in theory, for women who marry high earning men that support them staying home. That’s a very small portion of men, and most women have to work whether they want to or not.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Would they still fight for workforce accessibility/equality or accept that stay at home mom is better than working a full time job and not seeing their kids grow up? Did it provide the happiness it promised?
Saw this question being asked and I know what I would choose
What kind of planet do you live on?
I have a full-time job, always have. I've definitely seen my kids grow up. You sound dim.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Would they still fight for workforce accessibility/equality or accept that stay at home mom is better than working a full time job and not seeing their kids grow up? Did it provide the happiness it promised?
Saw this question being asked and I know what I would choose
It's a personal choice.
If you are going back in time, you also need to consider not taking up a valuable selective college seat, for someone who might need that seat and degree to advance themselves...working, earning money, providing for a family (thinking of single parents for example).
Anonymous wrote:A good number of parents don't see their kids from 7-7, its not full time parenting, no matter how you define it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I hate such stupid questions.
Not all women are mothers. Not all mothers want to stay home. Those mothers that do want to stay home, still can.
+1
Now you have the choice - which was the power we gained. No, I don’t think we should give that up.
It’s a choice in theory, for women who marry high earning men that support them staying home. That’s a very small portion of men, and most women have to work whether they want to or not.
+1 most women have to work and raise kids. It sucks.
No one works and raises kids, someone else does. It can be family or hired help but its always someone who is physically doing it.
Anonymous wrote:Would they still fight for workforce accessibility/equality or accept that stay at home mom is better than working a full time job and not seeing their kids grow up? Did it provide the happiness it promised?
Saw this question being asked and I know what I would choose
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Would they still fight for workforce accessibility/equality or accept that stay at home mom is better than working a full time job and not seeing their kids grow up? Did it provide the happiness it promised?
Saw this question being asked and I know what I would choose
I think about this all the time. I think if you have a good marriage and husband, assuming that one job is enough to live a nice life, the 50s way seems easier. But that's a lot of ifs.
Just remember many if not most mommies were bored to tears and drugged with valium a/k/a "Mama's little helper." Be a little careful romanticizing it.
That said, it's true that a widespread two-parent workforce did help catalyze the affordability crisis with housing, I think.
DP but what on Earth is your source for this?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Birth control resources, from education to pills to abortion, all should be easily and freely available to every woman. No woman should ever be forced to keep a baby she doesn't want.
I agree in some respects. I also feel like before all of this was available, men were forced to take more responsibility. Now that it’s a woman’s choice to have children, men don’t feel responsible, society at large isn’t responsible, and no one is responsible for caring for and raising a child but the woman herself.
I am against the pro-life movement. It’s obviously about gaining political power and controlling women. But I wonder if reproductive freedom has actually been good for women, particularly women in the workforce.
When my male colleague was injured while he was skiing and had to take three months off, everyone was understanding and sympathetic about his accident. When I went to take three months off for maternity leave, people were angry that I had made a decision to have a child at that particular time, and I was asked to do a lot of the less desirable work ahead of time, during my last couple of months of pregnancy.
When my colleague had tens of thousands in bills following his accident, they were mostly paid by health insurance and then they worked out a plan for him to pay off the rest. I had to come up with tens of thousands for childcare out of pocket.
Obviously, I did plan for this because I exist in the same world everyone else does. But I wonder how it might have been different if pregnancy was viewed as a natural event that occurs rather than a specific (and somewhat inconsiderate) choice.
Anonymous wrote:Most fathers are indeed part time fathers in practical sense.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Would they still fight for workforce accessibility/equality or accept that stay at home mom is better than working a full time job and not seeing their kids grow up? Did it provide the happiness it promised?
Saw this question being asked and I know what I would choose
I think about this all the time. I think if you have a good marriage and husband, assuming that one job is enough to live a nice life, the 50s way seems easier. But that's a lot of ifs.
Just remember many if not most mommies were bored to tears and drugged with valium a/k/a "Mama's little helper." Be a little careful romanticizing it.
That said, it's true that a widespread two-parent workforce did help catalyze the affordability crisis with housing, I think.