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The “Mommy Wars” Are Over
Townhall.com ^ | December 30, 2013 | Rachel Alexander

Posted on 12/30/2013 5:09:11 AM PST by Kaslin

Women used to be faced with a dilemma: forgo a career to stay at home and raise children, or sacrifice the upbringing of your children in order to pursue a career. Since the 1960’s, feminists and conservatives have sparred over this choice. Feminists criticized mothers who stayed at home, claiming women could instead “have it all;” pursue a career while putting their kids in daycare. Conservatives criticized women who put their career first, correctly observing that a parent in the home raising the children is better for the children. This debate was known as the “mommy wars.”

The war is now essentially over and the feminists have won, although not because they were more persuasive. Only 12 percent of moms believe that working full time is an ideal situation for children, and 74 percent of adults say that mothers working outside the home makes it harder to raise children. About half of adults surveyed believe that children are better off if the mother does not work.

Yet today, only three in ten mothers do not work outside the home. The reason the feminists have won is because it is now difficult for men - as well as women - to make enough money from one job to support the entire family. As economic conditions continue to spiral down under Obama, employers have been forced to cut jobs, hours and benefits. Jobs that used to pay decently have been replaced by free student labor, or “internships.” Most parents are lucky to find full-time jobs that pay slightly better than minimum wage. There are fewer people working now than anytime within the past 35 years; only 63 percent of working-age Americans are in the workforce. At the same time, the cost of healthcare, gas, food and other necessities continues to increase.

The median annual household income across the U.S. in 2011 was $50,054. It is extremely difficult for a family of four or more to survive on that level of income. Many parents have student loans, credit card debt from a temporary loss of employment, or huge medical expenses from procedures not covered by insurance. Times have greatly changed since the Ward and June Cleaver era of the 1950’s; workers can no longer count on stable employment, and student loan costs have soared.

Attempting to be a stay-at-home mom on a husband’s meager salary is difficult. Low-income stay-at-home moms, where the annual household income is less than $36,000, report higher levels of unhappiness. Over half report they are struggling, and four percent say they are suffering. Only 46 percent say they are thriving.

Men no longer have more college education than women, making it less likely men will have a high income. Women now make up approximately half of the U.S. labor force. In 1970, they only accounted for 38 percent.

Compounding the problem is the increase in single parents. The number of households led by single mothers has more than tripled since 1960, to 25 percent of households. It is more expensive to support two households than one, not to mention all the additional ongoing legal costs from child support and custody battles. When parents divorce, even if one parent was making a decent income, everything becomes more expensive. In this area the feminists have won some ground; they have successfully removed the stigma of being a single parent, making it easier for parents to walk away from their marriages rather than try and work things out for the good of the children.

What does this mean for families and children? Children are spending more time in daycare and less time with their parents. Over 60 percent of children under age five are in some type of regular child care arrangement. According to research from the Heritage Foundation,

Numerous academic studies suggest that more hours spent in daycare in a child’s earliest years is associated with lower social competence and negative behavioral outcomes, and that these persist through childhood and adolescence. Greater amounts of time spent in non-maternal care and younger age of entry into daycare were associated with a greater likelihood of socio-emotional problems and lower cognitive skills. The cumulative effect of extensive daycare was associated with lower academic achievement and poorer emotional health. As one comprehensive study that tracked 1,300 children from infancy through age 15 found, the quality of daycare was significantly less important regarding social and emotional outcomes than the number of hours spent in daycare. The negative effects of day care were more persistent for children who spent long hours in center-care settings.

Additionally, children are learning values from someone who likely does not share the values of the parents, which is especially troubling for conservative parents. The feminists have pushed hard for this in the name of women’s rights and this is the result.

When the left finds itself losing on a particular issue, it finds a sneaky way instead to ram its agenda through. Having failed to convince women it is better to put their kids in daycare and work full time, Obama and the left are forcing them to do so by continuing the dismal economic conditions. This is just one of many issues Obama is forcing through by artificially extending the recession. The same can be said about Obamacare. Making healthcare unaffordable is opening the door for single-payer (socialist) healthcare.

The left’s ultimate goal of putting both parents in the workforce and their children in daycare has nothing to do with their pretense of “choice” for women. It has everything to do with gaining control over our children at a young age and indoctrinating them in the left’s values. Daycare regulations are increasing and soon parents will have very little control over what happens at them. The only way to stop this is to put conservatives back in power in order to revive the economy with adequate jobs. Times have changed, especially with more women going to college than men, and so the real choice should be whether the mother or father stays at home with the children.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Editorial; Government
KEYWORDS: 0bamacare; workingclass
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1 posted on 12/30/2013 5:09:12 AM PST by Kaslin
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To: Kaslin

Feninazis won. Nah, more like the economy forced both parents to work. Which many believe was orchestrated intentionally.


2 posted on 12/30/2013 5:21:09 AM PST by jsanders2001
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To: Kaslin
The reason the feminists have won is because it is now difficult for men - as well as women - to make enough money from one job to support the entire family

I don't completely agree with this. It's DIFFICULT, but it's not impossible. In the modern materialist society, I can see how it would be "impossible," but if we went back to our old ways, cook every meal, care for the things we have, live on an actual budget, it could be done.

The only reason it's difficult is that people want more and more but want to do less to get it.

3 posted on 12/30/2013 5:31:05 AM PST by rarestia (It's time to water the Tree of Liberty.)
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To: Kaslin

Women have to do everything now because the men have turned into fleshly sex fiends.


4 posted on 12/30/2013 5:37:17 AM PST by yldstrk (My heroes have always been cowboys)
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To: Kaslin
This article is full of tendentious overgeneralizations and statistics flung about free of context.

It's not clear to me what the author's intention is in all of this. Economic determinism is not a conservative philosophy.

5 posted on 12/30/2013 5:39:57 AM PST by Tax-chick ("Try not to get too far ahead in the story. Spoilers abound." ~ Nicknamedbob)
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To: Tax-chick

It also does not address the issue of welfare mothers and the men that they copulate with.


6 posted on 12/30/2013 6:18:23 AM PST by Daveinyork (IER)
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To: jsanders2001

The “economy” didn’t force both parents to work,
TAX POLICY forced both parents to work.

If one father wasn’t supporting his family and 3 other families,
both parents wouldn’t have to work.


7 posted on 12/30/2013 6:20:38 AM PST by MrB (The difference between a Humanist and a Satanist - the latter admits whom he's working for)
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To: Kaslin

“Numerous academic studies suggest that more hours spent in daycare in a child’s earliest years is associated with lower social competence and negative behavioral outcomes, and that these persist through childhood and adolescence. Greater amounts of time spent in non-maternal care and younger age of entry into daycare were associated with a greater likelihood of socio-emotional problems and lower cognitive skills.”

Conjunction does not imply causality. One might argue that the children of the lowest-income, least educated parents are most likely to be in daycare, and their lower levels of achievement are due to inheritance.


8 posted on 12/30/2013 6:20:43 AM PST by proxy_user
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To: Daveinyork
That was something I observed. The author mushed up a lot of statistics about "moms" without bringing up other significant factors.

For example: Low-income stay-at-home moms, where the annual household income is less than $36,000, report higher levels of unhappiness. Over half report they are struggling, and four percent say they are suffering. Only 46 percent say they are thriving.

Okay, what else can you tell us about these "moms"? For example, which ones are married? Are the "thriving" 46% married? Unmarried motherhood is highly correlated with unhappiness.

9 posted on 12/30/2013 6:27:05 AM PST by Tax-chick ("Try not to get too far ahead in the story. Spoilers abound." ~ Nicknamedbob)
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To: rarestia
I don't completely agree with this. It's DIFFICULT, but it's not impossible.

Well I'm sure not gonna complain about the existence of daycare.

Having a five-year-old when you're fifty gives you the choice of daycare, or having your kid raised by Rip Van Winkle ;o)

10 posted on 12/30/2013 6:33:13 AM PST by papertyger ("refusing to draw an inescapable conclusion does not qualify as a 'difference of opinion.'")
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To: Tax-chick

From what I hear in my office, married motherhood means taking care of husband as childish as the kids -— doesn’t want to work, wants to have his demands for daily sex addressed, wants to buy himself cool gadgets while the kids go without, wants to make demands about “respect” and makes complaints about his “role as father” being “respected” and that if everybody doesn’t jump when he says so being “emasculated”.

It’s all about their genitals.

Well someone has to be the adult in these situations and usually it is the woman


11 posted on 12/30/2013 6:42:20 AM PST by yldstrk (My heroes have always been cowboys)
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To: yldstrk

My husband worked with a woman who said, “I am working so my husband can pay for his golf.” It wasn’t too long after that they divorced.


12 posted on 12/30/2013 6:45:19 AM PST by wintertime
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To: yldstrk

It’s all about their genitals.
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

There is one more thing to add to your list. They are addicted to porn and other sexual perversions.


13 posted on 12/30/2013 6:47:41 AM PST by wintertime
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To: Kaslin

14 posted on 12/30/2013 6:47:54 AM PST by JoeProBono (SOME IMAGES MAY BE DISTURBING VIEWER DISCRETION IS ADVISED;-{)
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To: wintertime

yep, agreed


15 posted on 12/30/2013 6:48:15 AM PST by yldstrk (My heroes have always been cowboys)
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To: Kaslin

A family of four can easily be raised on $50,000 a year. One simply has to live at the standard that families lived in the 1960s. Cable TVs, multiple cell phones, multiple computers, several cars, and large houses are expensive. It’s all about choices.


16 posted on 12/30/2013 6:54:28 AM PST by FXRP
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To: jsanders2001

Exactly. We could live on my husband’s income. It would be tough, but we could do it. I would have more time to hand out laundry, wash cloth diapers, plant even larger gardens than I do, etc. as it is we already purchase basically ingredients versus packaged, prepared foods. I bake our bread and even make our corn tortillas. The reason I must work is for my retirement. We wouldn’t have enough to put a little something in my IRA every year so that I wouldn’t be a burden to our children, or be visited by a death panel. This was very well thought out, and the plan since FDR. I just count my blessings that I’m off every evening, weekend, holiday, and summer. My husband is on for 24 and off for 48. This means our in-home childcare expenses are minimal, but most importantly another person isn’t raising our kids.


17 posted on 12/30/2013 7:08:52 AM PST by goodwithagun (My gun has killed fewer people than Ted Kennedy's car.)
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To: FXRP

One thing to keep in mind, though, with the devaluing of the currency,

a minimum wage earner in the 50’s had the same buying power
as a degreed professional today.


18 posted on 12/30/2013 7:14:40 AM PST by MrB (The difference between a Humanist and a Satanist - the latter admits whom he's working for)
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To: yldstrk
Well someone has to be the adult in these situations and usually it is the woman

Because women are known for their equanimity, scrupulous adherence to fair-play, and willingness to subordinate their desires.

Get real. If you can't find a corresponding weakness in women for every trait you abhor in men, it indicates nothing but chauvinism.

19 posted on 12/30/2013 7:16:41 AM PST by papertyger ("refusing to draw an inescapable conclusion does not qualify as a 'difference of opinion.'")
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To: papertyger

I am being “real”


20 posted on 12/30/2013 7:18:24 AM PST by yldstrk (My heroes have always been cowboys)
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