Son of Jack
New member
you obviously do not appreciate how important a flat screen high definition tv is
Apparently not...:chuckle:
you obviously do not appreciate how important a flat screen high definition tv is
A foru week old fetus, which cannot even see,hear or feel pain, is not a "mewmber" of a family .
No, no no! It may seem rightfully arguable that way, but it is not so? Who is going to take care of the children, a babysitter? They charge and usually unless related hardly love the children in their care. You say daycare, well daycare also costs. Consider, the expense of driving to work, the cost of childcare and the loss of love for most of the wake hours for children?.......................
If a woman wants to stay at home and raise children, and her husband earns a good enough living for her to do this, that's her right. No one is forcing her to work. But you fail to realize that in this very difficult economy, many married women with children have no choice but to work or their families would not be able to stay afloat and they would never be able to earn an adequate living.
My mother worked when I was growing up. I missed out on having a mother and was raised by housekeepers. I decided to work at home and raise my child working with me.
Most of this is the result of social decadence.
Y Someday, this will all change!
What do sociologists have to do with anything? It was women themselves who decided that 'home-making' was oppressive. It was the 1960s, and people were reacting to the oppressiveness of the 1950s. It wasn't just women, everyone wanted to be 'emancipated' in some way or other.I blame the social structure, and more than anyone, those sociologists, who started with this 'homemaker is oppressive' nonsense! I would like to dunk them all and give the spoiled Muslim boys a good whipping! Someday, this will all change!
What do sociologists have to do with anything? It was women themselves who decided that 'home-making' was oppressive. It was the 1960s, and people were reacting to the oppressiveness of the 1950s. It wasn't just women, everyone wanted to be 'emancipated' in some way or other.
And women had a point, back then. We forget, now, how constrained they really were. How women were locked into abusive marriages by husbands who kept everything in their own names and by a society that helped enforce their servitude to the point of demoralization.
Now days women can choose to be a housewife or not to be, and can expect to be treated respectfully either way. And she can do something about it if she's not. But that wasn't always the case. A big reason why women wanted to fight for the right to work back in the 60s was to create a way out of an abusive or oppressive domestic situation if they needed it. Also, not EVERY woman is suited for, or desirous of being a mother or a housewife. And until the social battles of the 1960s, they had few other options.
But none of this has much of anything to do with 'sociologists'. They study social trends as and after they happen. They don't propose them.
But I don't want to force a woman to bear a child against her will, if it would be disastrous for her and her family.
Those are good points. There is good and bad to everything.
Thus the reason government provides free education at tax funded institutions.One of the aims of marxism is to break down the family unit, to separate parent from child. The reason for this is to prevent the parents from passing on their religious and moral values to their children, not only in the crucial early development years, but in the crucial teen years when peer pressure is strongest. In marxist thought, the state is the primary influence, and this is why Castro took children from their parents at the age of seven. This is why communist regimes encouraged children to spy on their parents. The family is the cornerstone of human society. When it's broken, the state can step in and fill the void.
The TheologyOnline.com TOPIC OF THE DAY for May 11th, 2012 09:33 AM
toldailytopic: Homemaker. Do women who choose to stay at home and raise the family miss out on something?
Take the topic above and run with it! Slice it, dice it, give us your general thoughts about it. Everyday there will be a new TOL Topic of the Day.
If you want to make suggestions for the Topic of the Day send a Tweet to @toldailytopic or @theologyonline or send it to us via Facebook.