Anonymous wrote:You can be the same race and make generalizations about that race that aren't true. Just because you are black doesn't make you the preeminent authority on what all black people do.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is not meant to be racist, I am black myself, but as a nanny I have found that a lot of black families that start out looking for a nanny attempt to grossly under pay. Im talking $150/week for 3 kids from 7-6 under pay. I think its simply a result of having little knowledge of what hiring a nanny entails. They often falsely assume that its the same as hiring a neighborhood teenager on a Friday night to babysit. So the attempt fails miserably, the children go to daycare, and they tell all their friends to never try it because its awful.
+1 I'm also a African American nanny and every time I try to work with a black family I get screwed over and under paided.
That might be due to the fact that you use the word "paided".
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is not meant to be racist, I am black myself, but as a nanny I have found that a lot of black families that start out looking for a nanny attempt to grossly under pay. Im talking $150/week for 3 kids from 7-6 under pay. I think its simply a result of having little knowledge of what hiring a nanny entails. They often falsely assume that its the same as hiring a neighborhood teenager on a Friday night to babysit. So the attempt fails miserably, the children go to daycare, and they tell all their friends to never try it because its awful.
+1 I'm also a African American nanny and every time I try to work with a black family I get screwed over and under paided.
That might be due to the fact that you use the word "paided".
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is not meant to be racist, I am black myself, but as a nanny I have found that a lot of black families that start out looking for a nanny attempt to grossly under pay. Im talking $150/week for 3 kids from 7-6 under pay. I think its simply a result of having little knowledge of what hiring a nanny entails. They often falsely assume that its the same as hiring a neighborhood teenager on a Friday night to babysit. So the attempt fails miserably, the children go to daycare, and they tell all their friends to never try it because its awful.
+1 I'm also a African American nanny and every time I try to work with a black family I get screwed over and under paided.
Anonymous wrote:16:30, I am 16:10, and I get what you are saying. The reason I said it is harsh is because of the generalization. That's probably why someone said you were racist, which I don't think is necessarily true. It just seems harsh to say "you don't see a lot of black families with nannies is because black families do X". Maybe some do, but we didn't and wouldn't. In fact, precisely because we didn't know what to expect, I researched very carefully and asked a lot of people with nannies. That's not to say that every black employer does the same, I just think generalizations are really harsh and DCUM is famous for that kind of snap judgment in a bad way. If your reasoning was applied across the board, then one look around DCUM says white MBs are all cheap too, and abusive employers and bad parents who hate spending time with their own kids too. And I like to think that is not the case, and no one would posit that that is why there are few white MBs in any given place (actually, people might, since this is DCUM, after all). I tried to respond based on my family without saying what that means for everyone of the race because of that. To me, to do anything else just seems too hasty to judge, that's all I mean when I said your generalization on that front seemed harsh.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is not meant to be racist, I am black myself, but as a nanny I have found that a lot of black families that start out looking for a nanny attempt to grossly under pay. Im talking $150/week for 3 kids from 7-6 under pay. I think its simply a result of having little knowledge of what hiring a nanny entails. They often falsely assume that its the same as hiring a neighborhood teenager on a Friday night to babysit. So the attempt fails miserably, the children go to daycare, and they tell all their friends to never try it because its awful.
+1 I'm also a African American nanny and every time I try to work with a black family I get screwed over and under paided.
Why do you think that is, based on your personal experience?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is not meant to be racist, I am black myself, but as a nanny I have found that a lot of black families that start out looking for a nanny attempt to grossly under pay. Im talking $150/week for 3 kids from 7-6 under pay. I think its simply a result of having little knowledge of what hiring a nanny entails. They often falsely assume that its the same as hiring a neighborhood teenager on a Friday night to babysit. So the attempt fails miserably, the children go to daycare, and they tell all their friends to never try it because its awful.
+1 I'm also a African American nanny and every time I try to work with a black family I get screwed over and under paided.
Anonymous wrote:This is not meant to be racist, I am black myself, but as a nanny I have found that a lot of black families that start out looking for a nanny attempt to grossly under pay. Im talking $150/week for 3 kids from 7-6 under pay. I think its simply a result of having little knowledge of what hiring a nanny entails. They often falsely assume that its the same as hiring a neighborhood teenager on a Friday night to babysit. So the attempt fails miserably, the children go to daycare, and they tell all their friends to never try it because its awful.
Anonymous wrote:Maybe it's OP who is surprised that most nannies don't much care what color you or your children are, as long as you pay fairly.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is not meant to be racist, I am black myself, but as a nanny I have found that a lot of black families that start out looking for a nanny attempt to grossly under pay. Im talking $150/week for 3 kids from 7-6 under pay. I think its simply a result of having little knowledge of what hiring a nanny entails. They often falsely assume that its the same as hiring a neighborhood teenager on a Friday night to babysit. So the attempt fails miserably, the children go to daycare, and they tell all their friends to never try it because its awful.
Then you failed.
We're not talking about whether or not black employers under-pay. We're talking about how common or uncommon it is for AA's in DC to have nannie
People on DCUM respond however they want, even though it often gets way off OP's question. There's no "winning" or "failing" here, but there certainly is a diversity of opinions and tangents. You never know what to expect. Isn't that why you're here?