Now to clarify right off the bat, I have nothing against women working.
BUT, back in the old days before women became a common sight in the workplace did we have so many social ills as we do now? I am to young to remember see, everyone who talks about the good old days seems to remember their childhood, not the reality of what it was like for the parents.
I picture my town, county or state with all many women home during the day. Home when the kids go to school and home when the kids get home from school.
Knowing where each kid belongs and one house being where kids congregate until dinner, then back out to play till dark.
Knowing which cars belong to what neighbors and their friends or relatives.
Knowing if little joey or sara doesn't go by around 7:30 towards home that somebody should check up on him or call home or to the neighbors to make sure some creep didn't snatch him or her.
Knowing who does and doesn't belong.
Being unafraid to put someone else's child in their place with no concern the kids parent will get pissed at them for disciplining the child.
Taking turns driving the kids to activities thereby taking the go go go pressure off of each of them.
I could go on but I hope you are getting my point.
In the economic arena We have mom and dad Doe with there three little kids. Dad has a good job with insurance, they bought a house they could afford, Mom drives a nice low mileage but not brand new car, they have a second older model car for Dad to drive to work.
In a modern family mom and dad both work but don't make enough to get by very well.
Neither has insurance but they do make enough to keep up with the Joneses.
The older kids have a Playstation 3, the younger a nintendo wii, they have ipod touches(64GB) and lots of other gadgets to keep the kids quiet when they get home at night because they are so exhausted from work and running that they just can't bear to entertain the kids, they need a couple hours of chill out time for themselves before bed.
They are so burned out that they can't discipline the kids. Plus they feel guilty for being gone all day.
Both parents are miserable. The kids are brats because they feel if not neglected at least ignored.
Now here is my question to ponder, Why can't we double what a guy is paid and bring the women home, not where they *belong* but where they can give the best service to the kids and the community.
Mom can get a part time job for some spending money or her own bank account or even for personal satisfaction.
She can work full time if she wants but isn't made to feel like a lesser person or a lazy worthless drain on society because she chooses to stay home and be there for the family.
Once the kids are in school she can add some hours and make a decent living to pack away for her retirement and as a safety net if her husband is abusive and she needs to leave him. If she does leave him he will pay her alimony so she can still be there for the kids. She won't have to live on welfare and drain our country's resources.
If her husband starts running around with another woman the whole community knows and he gets caught. Divorce is unacceptable so he stays on and supports his family, at least until the kids are in college. The family goes to counseling to deal with why the infedelity happened, they have insurance to pay for it.
If the neighborhood kids are over and one misbehaves she won't end up with a lawsuit but will be praised for discipling the little rats.
So do you guys see what I am getting at?
I think part of the reason people are so screwed up is because everybody is miserable because we are being forced out of our natural family roles and into something man-made of ideals.
I have nothing against a woman who wants to work, and think that we should still go to college and get an education, but why should we feel we are nothing if we don't have a full time job that we spend more waking hours at than we do caring for our kids.
Why should we be thought of as lazy and worthless if we don't want to work, but would rather be a stay at home mom. Shouldn't a stay at home mom(or Dad) be the norm and not the exception.