Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:hey snarky dcum wannabe nanny: you sound like you have a problem with dual income parents who went to college, grad school, work their tails off and pay their bills. Grow up.
There IS a problem with selfish parents who pay poorly AND neglect to offer basic health insurance benefits to the professional providing the FT care of their child. Sorry.
Then don't work there. That is what us grown ups do.
I have a big salary and spectacular benefits. This is what I wanted and to get here I switched jobs a few times, each for a better position.
Being a domestic worker, you notoriously are underpaid with very little benefits. This should not have come as a suprise when you picked this profession. Did you research before you embarked on a nanny career? There is no career advancement, no retirement, rarely healthcare, and no job stability. This is not a newsflash and is how domestic work goes.
What...are you talking about? I understand that you had the opportunities, skills, access to education, family/friend/professional network to allow you to make a lot of choices in regards to your employment but not everyone is so lucky. In 1911 it was people like you babbling on about how children had always worked in the coal mines and why do those namby pamby liberals want to end child labor THATS JUST HOW IT GOES. Just because it's how things have been doesn't mean it's the way they should be. (You realize the history of domestic workers being criminally underpaid stems, at least in the US, from our history of slavery, right? Feel like lecturing us all on how that's the way it goes?)
I too worked these kind of jobs, spending years in the restaurant business where healthcare is not available. Instead of expecting people to take care of me, I figured out how to do something else, not obtaining my college degree until I was 32yrs old and saddled with 2 children. Thank god it is no longer 1911 and I now have the option to pick a new career, which is what I did. No professional network, I simply got my first job from answering an ad in the paper for a receptionist position that did NOT have benefits and was at minimum wage. It sounds nice and all, but you will get absolutely NO WHERE In life if you are waiting on the government of your employer to take care of your basic needs.
I'm sorry for people who are nannies not because they love their chosen career, but because they have no other opportunities, skills, or education. I feel even worse for people who can't seem to connect the dots.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:hey snarky dcum wannabe nanny: you sound like you have a problem with dual income parents who went to college, grad school, work their tails off and pay their bills. Grow up.
There IS a problem with selfish parents who pay poorly AND neglect to offer basic health insurance benefits to the professional providing the FT care of their child. Sorry.
Then don't work there. That is what us grown ups do.
I have a big salary and spectacular benefits. This is what I wanted and to get here I switched jobs a few times, each for a better position.
Being a domestic worker, you notoriously are underpaid with very little benefits. This should not have come as a suprise when you picked this profession. Did you research before you embarked on a nanny career? There is no career advancement, no retirement, rarely healthcare, and no job stability. This is not a newsflash and is how domestic work goes.
What...are you talking about? I understand that you had the opportunities, skills, access to education, family/friend/professional network to allow you to make a lot of choices in regards to your employment but not everyone is so lucky. In 1911 it was people like you babbling on about how children had always worked in the coal mines and why do those namby pamby liberals want to end child labor THATS JUST HOW IT GOES. Just because it's how things have been doesn't mean it's the way they should be. (You realize the history of domestic workers being criminally underpaid stems, at least in the US, from our history of slavery, right? Feel like lecturing us all on how that's the way it goes?)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:hey snarky dcum wannabe nanny: you sound like you have a problem with dual income parents who went to college, grad school, work their tails off and pay their bills. Grow up.
There IS a problem with selfish parents who pay poorly AND neglect to offer basic health insurance benefits to the professional providing the FT care of their child. Sorry.
Then don't work there. That is what us grown ups do.
I have a big salary and spectacular benefits. This is what I wanted and to get here I switched jobs a few times, each for a better position.
Being a domestic worker, you notoriously are underpaid with very little benefits. This should not have come as a suprise when you picked this profession. Did you research before you embarked on a nanny career? There is no career advancement, no retirement, rarely healthcare, and no job stability. This is not a newsflash and is how domestic work goes.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:hey snarky dcum wannabe nanny: you sound like you have a problem with dual income parents who went to college, grad school, work their tails off and pay their bills. Grow up.
There IS a problem with selfish parents who pay poorly AND neglect to offer basic health insurance benefits to the professional providing the FT care of their child. Sorry.
Anonymous wrote:hey snarky dcum wannabe nanny: you sound like you have a problem with dual income parents who went to college, grad school, work their tails off and pay their bills. Grow up.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sadly, no, even though most employers of nannies
get health insurance from their own job.
Thanks, feminists.
When will you put your money where your mouth is?
When we can afford to. You may find this hard to believe, but most of us aren't wealthy, and are struggling to pay the nanny salary at all and get by. And, oh, by the way, most of us do not get our insurance paid by our employers, or even subsidized. We buy it through a plan offered by our employer.
Anonymous wrote:Sadly, no, even though most employers of nannies
get health insurance from their own job.
Thanks, feminists.
When will you put your money where your mouth is?