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Who doesn't value womens' right to choose their own life path?

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Re: Who doesn't value womens' right to choose their own life path?

  • imageTefLepOM:
    image+diana82+:

    Yes, one liberal woman's comment is reflective of all liberal women's opinions.


    This must be what people get annoyed with when comments like Rush is the mouthpiece of the GOP? 

    Yes, because Rush is equal in fame and notoriety to Rosen.

    Confused

    image
  • imagesandsonik:

    I'm only halfway through this thread, but so far everyone seems to be running as fast as they can from the original comment that sparked all this.

    And I don't understand why.  She was absolutely correct - and twisting her statement into being anti-choice for women is ridiculous.

    Here's the remark Rosen made: "She's never actually worked a day in her life. She's never dealt with the kind of economic issues that a majority of the women in this country are facing."

    What part of that statement is untrue, unfair, or vicious? It's a simple matter of fact, and Rosen was only able to bring it up because Romney deferred to Ann Romney in the matter of women's economic issues.

    It's simply absurd that Romney can't answer a question about women and the economy without saying "I wish my wife were here, she's the expert".

    So I think the counter response that someone who has never worked a day in their life outside the home (is that really true or even possible?) isn't an expert on the job market is a fair statement.

    Someone brought up empathy, and said just because a candidate is rich doesn't mean he can't empathize with others who aren't.  I would say that the same should be true here.  When he is asked about women he should be able to empathize and have some position without looking visibly uncomfortable and saying "Where's my wife? She should answer this."  Now picture Bill Clinton - someone who really had empathy - being asked the same question.  He wouldn't need to hand it over to someone else.

    People are running away from the statement because of the first part where she says that Ann Romney's never worked a day in her life.  It devalues the work done by stay at home parents.  If she had said 'she's never held a job outside of the home' that would be different.  It would have been better if she had just left off the part about not working - the part about not dealing with the economic realities that most do is a strong enough statement on its own, IMO.

    "Today, the mad scientist can't get a doomsday device, tomorrow it's the mad grad student. Where will it end?"
  • imageDylanite:
    imageTefLepOM:
    image+diana82+:

    Yes, one liberal woman's comment is reflective of all liberal women's opinions.


    This must be what people get annoyed with when comments like Rush is the mouthpiece of the GOP? 

    A petty deflection cloaked in a sh!tty analogy.  Nice. 

    zing
    Baby Birthday Ticker Ticker
  • imagebrideymcbriderson:
    imageTefLepOM:
    image+diana82+:

    Yes, one liberal woman's comment is reflective of all liberal women's opinions.


    This must be what people get annoyed with when comments like Rush is the mouthpiece of the GOP? 

    And I think it's a fair annoyance by conservatives.

    However, there's no question that how much influence Rush Limbaugh has among conservatives is a worthwhile discussion.  There is no question that he has a greater following and a greater impact on the direction of conservative thought than does Hilary Rosen vis a vis liberals.  The average person may not even realize that Hilary Rosen is the evil person who was behind the evil RIAA for so long, but the average person probably realizes who Rush is.

    To try to compare apples to apples, this would be a lot more salient criticism on the part of Pamela if, say, Rachel Maddow had said it - someone with a media show and a large following.  This is akin to a conservative CEO saying something and someone trying to attribute that to all conservatives.

    But I digress.  Pamela owes us an apology.  The end.

    I am not comparing anything...the statement I quoted is reminiscent of silly statements about conservatives.

    I can't even dignify Pamela's stupid statement either.  Generalizations are stupid.  One person does not make for a good mouthpiece, especially when they make asinine comments.

    I feel as if I need a list of shiitstirrers here so I can avoid all posts begun by them.

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  • imagemominatrix:
    imageVanessa Doofenshmirtz:
    imagemominatrix:

    I guess I'm spending time and energy in another post defending the right of me and others like me to SAH as a valid, feminist choice because I like the sound of my own key-clicks.

     

    Like others have said, being a SAH parent is a valid life choice, and a valid feminist choice. My issues with Ms. Romney are the same issues I have with her husband, their wealth makes them utterly unable to grasp what it's really like.

    This is the view I was trying to zero in on. I suppose I want to know how big of a problem that is for you? If he were more aligned with you politically (which I know he's not), would this alone lessen his appeal to you?  What level of familiarity with economic struggle are you looking for in a president?

    ETA: I realize that's a hard question to answer. Maybe it's more of a rhetorical question. 

    Why do you think the level of love for Kerry was so lukewarm, even among Dems? And, in large part, I think a lot of the love for Obama has to do with his bootstrappy story.

    ...but this is coming from the party who worship the Kennedys. 

     

     

    I think part of the problem isn't just that he's filthy rich, it's that he doesn't get that not everybody is. Like, the oh, I get NASCAR thing because I know people who own teams. 

    You can be wealthy, very wealthy, and still get it. His statements seem to show that he doesn't... and, more importantly, the continuing nature of those statements show that he doesn't get that he doesn't get it, KWIM?

    I do see what you mean. I actually watched the Oscars this year and admit I thought of Romney when Billy Crystal made a lame joke to the front row of actors and said "hey, you guys wanna buy the Dodgers together?" So, I get your point. For me, I just think it endangers his likability more than his executive abilities. I'm not in the tank for Romney, but this issue doesn't disqualify him for me. As was said above (forgot who) could be a communication problem as much as anything. Dude needs a speech coach.
    ~formerly Bride2bMO~
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  • imagepedantic_wench:
    imageTefLepOM:
    image+diana82+:

    Yes, one liberal woman's comment is reflective of all liberal women's opinions.


    This must be what people get annoyed with when comments like Rush is the mouthpiece of the GOP? 

    Yes, because Rush is equal in fame and notoriety to Rosen.

    Confused

    It's not just that, though. And, to be entirely honest, I was kind of waiting for this comment (though not necessarily from you, Tef).

    I don't think you see posters here getting upset when an rep of the Rs makes a terrible statement. They get upset when an rep of the Rs makes a terrible statement, and the rest of the Rs don't condemn it.

    Which didn't happen here. A D party rep made an asshat-ish statement, and almost immediately other Ds came out to condemn it.

    I think I, personally, would be more willing to differentiate the idiotic statements of, for example, Rush from the broader R party if when he says fvcked up things, the party immediately condemned them. And, honestly, I don't see that happening nearly as often as I would hope.

    Actually, i'd love to see more of that from both parties.  

    image
    "You don't get to be all puke-face about your kid shooting your undead baby daddy when all you had to do was KEEP HIM IN THE FLUCKING HOUSE, LORI!" - doctorwho
  • imageVanessa Doofenshmirtz:
    imagemrsbecky07:
    imageVanessa Doofenshmirtz:

    Wasn't trying to imply anyone here specifically said that all wealthy people are out of touch. But surely you must see that the narrative has been that his wealth is somehow a mark against his ability to understand the middle class. There has been an obsession over his wealth.

    I'm not saying whether he's in touch or not, and I don't know the origin of this current twitter controversy in it's full context (whatever full commentary Mitt was making about his wife). If anyone has that and can post or link it, it could shed more light on the substance of Hillary's attack on Ann's employment status.

    But based on what I have read above in OP, it seems like she's just going after her for being a wealthy SAHM.

    And, on an unrelated note, 5 boys? Sigh. That will so be me if I decide to keep trying for a girl.  

    His wealth isn't a mark against him though.  His inability to effectively communicate that he understands the economic situation of the average American is, though.  It's not that wealthy people can't understand the middle class.  It's that Romney does not appear able to do so.

    That's a defensible position. It remains to be seen whether this is a fundamental inability, or a communication issue, or a result of selective media focus. I haven't formed my full opinion on him yet.

    I think there is some truth to the viewpoint of "if you don't understand something, it's going to be hard to fix it."

    If you've only ever been at Bain Capital, perhaps you really do think that it's all about tax breaks for businesses.  A struggling person in the middle class trying to stay there probably knows best what would help him/her the most and corporate tax breaks probably is not it.

    It's just like with many of the international development NGOs out there.  Lots of them want to go ahead and determine what is best for poor people in X country instead of asking those people what they need most and what would be most helpful.  They want to impose a solution without understanding the problem.

    You need to understand someone's situation before you can fix it.  And yes, most politicians do not fall into this category.  Which is probably why there have been so many failed policies and money thrown at the wrong thing from both sides.

    I'm not saying you need to live it to understand it... but you do need to get some sort of understanding.  Mittens just makes a lot of comments that make him seem like he doesn't really get it.  I don't know whether or not that means he does, but that's part of what gets people all riled up.

  • imagePamela05:

    Women.  Liberal Women.

    http://politicalticker.blogs.cnn.com/2012/04/12/democrats-comment-about-ann-romney-creates-firestorm-on-twitter/

    If feminism is really about a woman's right to choose what to do with her life, it's comments like this that make it hard for some women to say they are feminist. Women who SAHM feel economic impacts just like those who work.  They still have to figure out how to feed their kids, how to send them to good schools, etc.   

    It's not, so there's your fallacy.

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  • imagecharminglife:
    imagesandsonik:

    I'm only halfway through this thread, but so far everyone seems to be running as fast as they can from the original comment that sparked all this.

    And I don't understand why.  She was absolutely correct - and twisting her statement into being anti-choice for women is ridiculous.

    Here's the remark Rosen made: "She's never actually worked a day in her life. She's never dealt with the kind of economic issues that a majority of the women in this country are facing."

    What part of that statement is untrue, unfair, or vicious? It's a simple matter of fact, and Rosen was only able to bring it up because Romney deferred to Ann Romney in the matter of women's economic issues.

    It's simply absurd that Romney can't answer a question about women and the economy without saying "I wish my wife were here, she's the expert".

    So I think the counter response that someone who has never worked a day in their life outside the home (is that really true or even possible?) isn't an expert on the job market is a fair statement.

    Someone brought up empathy, and said just because a candidate is rich doesn't mean he can't empathize with others who aren't.  I would say that the same should be true here.  When he is asked about women he should be able to empathize and have some position without looking visibly uncomfortable and saying "Where's my wife? She should answer this."  Now picture Bill Clinton - someone who really had empathy - being asked the same question.  He wouldn't need to hand it over to someone else.

    People are running away from the statement because of the first part where she says that Ann Romney's never worked a day in her life.  It devalues the work done by stay at home parents.  If she had said 'she's never held a job outside of the home' that would be different.  It would have been better if she had just left off the part about not working - the part about not dealing with the economic realities that most do is a strong enough statement on its own, IMO.

    Exactly.  The statement as it stands perpetuates the myth that a SAHM is some sort of bon bon eating brain drain - how could she have any clue about the economy and needing a job?  SHE DOESN'T WORK.  Not, her husband is unbelievably wealthy and she's never struggled a day in her life.

    The idea that someone who has never worked a day in their life (aka SAHM) doesn't know what "most women" struggle with is absurd.  Just because I am SAH doesn't mean I don't worry about the economy - in fact, I worry about it because I am not dependent upon myself and my job, but because I am dependent upon someone else and THEIR job security.  If MH loses his job tomorrow, we have no money coming in at all - why wouldn't I be concerned about the state of the economy?  It's an asinine statement, and just perpetuates the myth that SAHMs are useless outside of the home and spend their days obsessed with kids and housecleaning.

    Personally, I also don't think that b/c Ann Romney is well off and has never struggled means she doesn't understand that the economy is an important issue for women this election (hell, it's important for everyone, man or woman - I'd be concerned if she didn't know that). I don't think being wealthy automatically makes you stupid or ignorant to the issues facing the rest of the country.  Does Romney appear to have some sort of communication issue at times?  I guess, but I don't really think this particular situation is a good example of him sounding that out of touch.  I would hope most people know that the economy is an important topic, regardless of whether they have lived paycheck to paycheck or struggled at some point.


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  • Sorry I think Pamela needed some entertainment.
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  • imagearborgold:
    imagepedantic_wench:
    imageTefLepOM:
    image+diana82+:

    Yes, one liberal woman's comment is reflective of all liberal women's opinions.


    This must be what people get annoyed with when comments like Rush is the mouthpiece of the GOP? 

    Yes, because Rush is equal in fame and notoriety to Rosen.

    Confused

    It's not just that, though. And, to be entirely honest, I was kind of waiting for this comment (though not necessarily from you, Tef).

    I don't think you see posters here getting upset when an rep of the Rs makes a terrible statement. They get upset when an rep of the Rs makes a terrible statement, and the rest of the Rs don't condemn it.

    Which didn't happen here. A D party rep made an asshat-ish statement, and almost immediately other Ds came out to condemn it.

    I think I, personally, would be more willing to differentiate the idiotic statements of, for example, Rush from the broader R party if when he says fvcked up things, the party immediately condemned them. And, honestly, I don't see that happening nearly as often as I would hope.

    Actually, i'd love to see more of that from both parties.  

    Agreed. Condemning this was the right thing to do, but it was also essential since her choice of words was political kryptonite. Regardless, glad to see a bipartisan "boo" to her condescending comment.
    ~formerly Bride2bMO~
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  • I don't know if saying that she has never held a job in her life was just hyperbole, but either way it sounds like Ann Romney has not had your regular SAHM experience that most people who SAH have. I mean, if she has truly never held a job and has been surrounded with crazy amounts of wealth, I don't think its a stretch to assume that she probably has a tough time relating to the struggles of the middle class. But again, I am not bothered by their wealth and I don't know that their inability to relate with the basic economic struggles is the most important quality for a president to have.
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  • image5thOfJuly:

    Why can't a candidate like Mitt say, "You know what? I've been lucky. I DON'T know what it's been like to struggle to put food on the table. I DON'T know what it's like to have to choose between healtcare or buying new shoes for the kids. I DON'T know what it's like to not be sure how to pay the bills. But what I DO know is that no American should have to make those choices. I promise to fight on behalf of all Americans to ensure that blahblahblah."

    Is that a campaign killer?

    Clap clap clap.  I would absolutely consider voting for someone who said this.

  • imageLittleMoxie:

    I think there is some truth to the viewpoint of "if you don't understand something, it's going to be hard to fix it."

    If you've only ever been at Bain Capital, perhaps you really do think that it's all about tax breaks for businesses.  A struggling person in the middle class trying to stay there probably knows best what would help him/her the most and corporate tax breaks probably is not it.

    It's just like with many of the international development NGOs out there.  Lots of them want to go ahead and determine what is best for poor people in X country instead of asking those people what they need most and what would be most helpful.  They want to impose a solution without understanding the problem.

    You need to understand someone's situation before you can fix it.  And yes, most politicians do not fall into this category.  Which is probably why there have been so many failed policies and money thrown at the wrong thing from both sides.

    I'm not saying you need to live it to understand it... but you do need to get some sort of understanding.  Mittens just makes a lot of comments that make him seem like he doesn't really get it.  I don't know whether or not that means he does, but that's part of what gets people all riled up.

    This comment struck me. It's hard to argue with your overall logic here. But to the bolded part -- I'm not sure that's true. A working, middle-class person feels their own economic struggles intensely and understandably their priorities are shaped by them. But every person doesn't necessarily think about solutions to their own problems in context with all the hairy macro-economic realities, and the ripple effects every regulatory or tax-related decision makes across the economy. Which is why I don't want the job of president, solving this economic situation in the face of passionate opposing theories of what will work is incredibly daunting. And I think all sides want the same outcome -- a robust middle-class and a society that affords plenty of opportunity. It's how to get there where they begin to disagree, and I *assume* that Mitt believes a business-friendly environment will ultimately help that struggling middle-class family by protecting an employers ability to sustain and add jobs -- which will be filled by the heads of those households.

    And I don't think you're wrong if you disagree with this, I'm just saying that a likely Romney voter might feel it's knowledge of the greater economic dynamics that will be key to the way forward, not personal experience with the economic struggle. Ideally, a candidate could have both. But I'm not holding my breath.

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  • imagecurmudgeon:
    image5thOfJuly:

    Why can't a candidate like Mitt say, "You know what? I've been lucky. I DON'T know what it's been like to struggle to put food on the table. I DON'T know what it's like to have to choose between healtcare or buying new shoes for the kids. I DON'T know what it's like to not be sure how to pay the bills. But what I DO know is that no American should have to make those choices. I promise to fight on behalf of all Americans to ensure that blahblahblah."

    Is that a campaign killer?

    Clap clap clap.  I would absolutely consider voting for someone who said this.

    Yes, that would be a breath of fresh air.  

    ~formerly Bride2bMO~
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    Zeus and Bubba
  • i do adore the irony that pamela is possibly every feminist's wet dream:  she's a highly educated female in a male dominated field who is (by her own admission) making as much as, if not more than, her male counterparts, but she thinks feminisim is a bullshit concept that's no longer necessary in our society.
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    imageimageimage
  • imagelaurenpetro:
    i do adore the irony that pamela is possibly every feminist's wet dream:  she's a highly educated female in a male dominated field who is (by her own admission) making as much as, if not more than, her male counterparts, but she thinks feminisim is a bullshit concept that's no longer necessary in our society.

     I can't even imagine being this ungrateful and tragically ignorant.

     

    image Josephine is 4.
  • imagesandsonik:

    I'm only halfway through this thread, but so far everyone seems to be running as fast as they can from the original comment that sparked all this.

    And I don't understand why.  She was absolutely correct - and twisting her statement into being anti-choice for women is ridiculous.

    Here's the remark Rosen made: "She's never actually worked a day in her life. She's never dealt with the kind of economic issues that a majority of the women in this country are facing."

    What part of that statement is untrue, unfair, or vicious? It's a simple matter of fact, and Rosen was only able to bring it up because Romney deferred to Ann Romney in the matter of women's economic issues.

    It's simply absurd that Romney can't answer a question about women and the economy without saying "I wish my wife were here, she's the expert".

    So I think the counter response that someone who has never worked a day in their life outside the home (is that really true or even possible?) isn't an expert on the job market is a fair statement.

    Someone brought up empathy, and said just because a candidate is rich doesn't mean he can't empathize with others who aren't.  I would say that the same should be true here.  When he is asked about women he should be able to empathize and have some position without looking visibly uncomfortable and saying "Where's my wife? She should answer this."  Now picture Bill Clinton - someone who really had empathy - being asked the same question.  He wouldn't need to hand it over to someone else.

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  • imageVanessa Doofenshmirtz:
    imageLittleMoxie:

    I think there is some truth to the viewpoint of "if you don't understand something, it's going to be hard to fix it."

    If you've only ever been at Bain Capital, perhaps you really do think that it's all about tax breaks for businesses.  A struggling person in the middle class trying to stay there probably knows best what would help him/her the most and corporate tax breaks probably is not it.

    It's just like with many of the international development NGOs out there.  Lots of them want to go ahead and determine what is best for poor people in X country instead of asking those people what they need most and what would be most helpful.  They want to impose a solution without understanding the problem.

    You need to understand someone's situation before you can fix it.  And yes, most politicians do not fall into this category.  Which is probably why there have been so many failed policies and money thrown at the wrong thing from both sides.

    I'm not saying you need to live it to understand it... but you do need to get some sort of understanding.  Mittens just makes a lot of comments that make him seem like he doesn't really get it.  I don't know whether or not that means he does, but that's part of what gets people all riled up.

    This comment struck me. It's hard to argue with your overall logic here. But to the bolded part -- I'm not sure that's true. A working, middle-class person feels their own economic struggles intensely and understandably their priorities are shaped by them. But every person doesn't necessarily think about solutions to their own problems in context with all the hairy macro-economic realities, and the ripple effects every regulatory or tax-related decision makes across the economy. Which is why I don't want the job of president, solving this economic situation in the face of passionate opposing theories of what will work is incredibly daunting. And I think all sides want the same outcome -- a robust middle-class and a society that affords plenty of opportunity. It's how to get there where they begin to disagree, and I *assume* that Mitt believes a business-friendly environment will ultimately help that struggling middle-class family by protecting an employers ability to sustain and add jobs -- which will be filled by the heads of those households.

    And I don't think you're wrong if you disagree with this, I'm just saying that a likely Romney voter might feel it's knowledge of the greater economic dynamics that will be key to the way forward, not personal experience with the economic struggle. Ideally, a candidate could have both. But I'm not holding my breath.

    I agree with you, and I know it's not that simple.  A business-friendly environment is good for everyone, I'm sure, and I do think that is a priority for Romney. 

    But tax breaks are just a part of that (I focus on that because many Rs act as if that will solve everything).  Just because you give a company a tax break, it doesn't mean they will pass along those savings to employees by increasing salaries.  Nor will they go out and hire new workers, all other things being equal (eg, prices and demand for their product).  If your business is a hedge fund, that is just extra money to the owners (although perhaps then the bonuses given to bankers ARE bigger that year, as they are based on profit.  This is not really the struggling middle class though).  However, I don't think a tax break will lead to them hiring more fund managers, or if that is a good thing - people whose jobs are dependent upon lower tax rates and nothing else.  But there are other policies that lead to business-friendly environment: streamlined bureaucracy, small business help, established legal system, etc.  Not everyone can pay for lawyers to help them navigate all of that.

    Like you said, everyone will focus on their struggles and that will be their priority- which is why an investment manager who makes most of his money on cap gains will care disproportionately about that tax, even if it's not necessarily a big driver of growth.  Someone in the middle class may want tuition credit for their kids, even though it's not helping the economy overall, too.  I get that this goes both ways.

    I don't think Romney is unqualified to be President due to his lack of understanding of the middle class struggle.  I wouldn't say that is the most important thing.  But I do understand why people wouldn't want to vote for him considering the disconnect they feel when he makes comments that show just how little he knows about their lives.  Especially when he is often talking about knowing how they feel and wanting to help them.  I can see a sense of "how can he fix this if he has no idea what is really happening?"  Maybe that's not fair; but it's completely understandable.

     

  • imagelanie30:

    imagelaurenpetro:
    i do adore the irony that pamela is possibly every feminist's wet dream:  she's a highly educated female in a male dominated field who is (by her own admission) making as much as, if not more than, her male counterparts, but she thinks feminisim is a bullshit concept that's no longer necessary in our society.

     I can't even imagine being this ungrateful and tragically ignorant.

     

    Come on, all. This is PAMELA. The one who pointed out the only reason there are Dems/Libs in this world is because while growing up, our parents didn't tell us "Life's Not Fair!"

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  • imagelaurenpetro:
    i do adore the irony that pamela is possibly every feminist's wet dream:  she's a highly educated female in a male dominated field who is (by her own admission) making as much as, if not more than, her male counterparts, but she thinks feminisim is a bullshit concept that's no longer necessary in our society.

    Actually, I get it.  I was an engineering student my 1st couple years at college, and in my first women's studies class I hesitated to identify as feminist the first day.

    It was b/c I had broken down those barriers.  I was in a school that was about 20%, looking at a future lucrative career.  My dad always supported those goals.  I saw no evidence that women needed feminism.

    That lasted all of 3 seconds before I realized that my case was exactly the proof of my own feminism and the need for it.  If I was so proud of being the unique case, doesn't that show inequality?  I also realized that what I'd been taught was feminism was Rush's version, and that I actually had always been a feminist.

    It did take some education, though, to grasp systemic issues beyond my own circumstance.  So, no, I'm not at all surprised by the irony. 

    image
  • imagecharminglife:

    People are running away from the statement because of the first part where she says that Ann Romney's never worked a day in her life.  It devalues the work done by stay at home parents.  If she had said 'she's never held a job outside of the home' that would be different.  It would have been better if she had just left off the part about not working - the part about not dealing with the economic realities that most do is a strong enough statement on its own, IMO.

    It was definitely a stupid comment from a political viewpoint.  It just deflected the focus to Ann Romney and, no doubt, a made up "war on stay at home moms".   No matter how you look at it, it was a rather petty, silly political attack - but that doesn't make it untrue, just unwise.  It's true that "Ann Romney has never dealt with the kind of economic issues that a majority of the women in this country are facing."

    But it's also kind of irrelevent whether she has or hasn't.  Ann Romney isn't running for president, so Rosen's comments are a bit unseemly.

    As I think about it I also think it's a little pie in the sky to say that feminism is about the right to have choices.  Most women have no choice; they have to work, just like most men.  I'm still waiting for the magic feminist fairy to wave her wand and tell me I can just stay home and I don't have to work!  The average woman is doing what Ann Romney does, and working 40 hours outside the house, and still has much less money in her purse.  

     Plenty of feminists, and plenty of anti-feminists have no choice but to work.  I sn't it depressing that after all these years, it's a very old fashioned notion that gives us 'choice': Marry a rich man.   

  • imagesandsonik:

    imagecharminglife:

    People are running away from the statement because of the first part where she says that Ann Romney's never worked a day in her life.  It devalues the work done by stay at home parents.  If she had said 'she's never held a job outside of the home' that would be different.  It would have been better if she had just left off the part about not working - the part about not dealing with the economic realities that most do is a strong enough statement on its own, IMO.

    It was definitely a stupid comment from a political viewpoint.  It just deflected the focus to Ann Romney and, no doubt, a made up "war on stay at home moms".   No matter how you look at it, it was a rather petty, silly political attack - but that doesn't make it untrue, just unwise.  It's true that "Ann Romney has never dealt with the kind of economic issues that a majority of the women in this country are facing."

     Plenty of feminists, and plenty of anti-feminists have no choice but to work.  I sn't it depressing that after all these years, it's a very old fashioned notion that gives us 'choice': Marry a rich man.   

    Off topic but couldn't resist responding to the bolded.

    DH and I are FAAAAR from rich.

    However, as a couple prior to marriage we decided that me being a SAHM (at least until the kids are in school, possibly longer) was a priority so we structured our lives accordingly.

    We bought a smaller house that we could easily afford on DH's salary, we still drive the cars we've had since getting out of college so no car payments, we have no data or texting on our phones, I coupon, etc.

    Being a SAHM is a choice and that choice is influenced by financial factors but many families find a way to make it work that are not rich. namely all the moms in my Mom's Group. None of us are rich by any stretch and most of us have to work at it to afford to stay home (couponing, consignment sale shopping, etc.)

    And I know that I get definite judgment from certain people about being a SAHM, and there is a general feeling that some people think I don't do anything but sit and watch soaps and eat bon bons.

    My SAHM friends feel it too. So yes many SAHMs feel like there is a "war" on our choice to be at home and are a little sensitive when people imply that what we do doesn't have value.

    Warning No formatter is installed for the format bbhtml
  • imagesandsonik:

    imagecharminglife:

    People are running away from the statement because of the first part where she says that Ann Romney's never worked a day in her life.  It devalues the work done by stay at home parents.  If she had said 'she's never held a job outside of the home' that would be different.  It would have been better if she had just left off the part about not working - the part about not dealing with the economic realities that most do is a strong enough statement on its own, IMO.

    It was definitely a stupid comment from a political viewpoint.  It just deflected the focus to Ann Romney and, no doubt, a made up "war on stay at home moms".   No matter how you look at it, it was a rather petty, silly political attack - but that doesn't make it untrue, just unwise.  It's true that "Ann Romney has never dealt with the kind of economic issues that a majority of the women in this country are facing."

    But it's also kind of irrelevent whether she has or hasn't.  Ann Romney isn't running for president, so Rosen's comments are a bit unseemly.

    As I think about it I also think it's a little pie in the sky to say that feminism is about the right to have choices.  Most women have no choice; they have to work, just like most men.  I'm still waiting for the magic feminist fairy to wave her wand and tell me I can just stay home and I don't have to work!  The average woman is doing what Ann Romney does, and working 40 hours outside the house, and still has much less money in her purse.  

     Plenty of feminists, and plenty of anti-feminists have no choice but to work.  I sn't it depressing that after all these years, it's a very old fashioned notion that gives us 'choice': Marry a rich man.   

    This is off topic and perhaps this is flammable, but I think more people would have that choice if they were willing to have a lower standard of living, which many aren't.  Probably not the majority of women, but a fair number could.  I'd be in that middle road.  Of course more money would be nice, but we could live decently off only my husband's income.  It would cost us, though in terms of vacation, clothing, eating out, obviously we would have a noticably smaller amount of disposable income.  Still a pretty good life, though.

    The pie in the sky part is having the choice to stay home AND all that money in her purse.  That indeed is for very few people.

  • imageSibil:

    imagelaurenpetro:
    i do adore the irony that pamela is possibly every feminist's wet dream:  she's a highly educated female in a male dominated field who is (by her own admission) making as much as, if not more than, her male counterparts, but she thinks feminisim is a bullshit concept that's no longer necessary in our society.

    Actually, I get it.  I was an engineering student my 1st couple years at college, and in my first women's studies class I hesitated to identify as feminist the first day.

    It was b/c I had broken down those barriers.  I was in a school that was about 20%, looking at a future lucrative career.  My dad always supported those goals.  I saw no evidence that women needed feminism.

    That lasted all of 3 seconds before I realized that my case was exactly the proof of my own feminism and the need for it.  If I was so proud of being the unique case, doesn't that show inequality?  I also realized that what I'd been taught was feminism was Rush's version, and that I actually had always been a feminist.

    It did take some education, though, to grasp systemic issues beyond my own circumstance.  So, no, I'm not at all surprised by the irony. 

     

     

    I grew up wih a mom who broke barriers in a male dominated field. She also was the first class of women at a major university. Her whole life has been about breaking barriers as a female. So I few up with that perspective. It took me a long time to realize its more thn that. So I get it, too. Although I'm not as feminist as many on here, I do get that it's bigger than I thought. 

     

     

     

    On another not,e I don't think Romney stands a chance at saying the right thing. Because of his wealth, people are either going to think he is being insinsere if he tries to go one way, and that he can't relate if he goes the other. He is screwed either way on these sorts of issues.  

  • imageIrishBrideND:

    On another not,e I don't think Romney stands a chance at saying the right thing. Because of his wealth, people are either going to think he is being insinsere if he tries to go one way, and that he can't relate if he goes the other. He is screwed either way on these sorts of issues.  

    Eh, maybe he can't say the perfect thing, but he could do a lot better than what he's been doing.  Someone suggested the "I'm lucky that I haven't had that struggle and I want to work hard for an America where more people have an opportunity to improve their situation so that perhpas their kids won't  have these struggles."  That was paraphrased, and not as good as the original, but you see my point.

     

  • cadencaden member
    Tenth Anniversary
    imageIrishBrideND:

    On another not,e I don't think Romney stands a chance at saying the right thing. Because of his wealth, people are either going to think he is being insinsere if he tries to go one way, and that he can't relate if he goes the other. He is screwed either way on these sorts of issues.  

    Agreed completely. All of these controversial statements are viewed through the prism of our own bias. The left will see Rosen's comment as true b/c in context it makes sense to them. I view a lot of Romney's so-called insensitive comments the same way -- I get what he's trying to say. I hope we can get back to policy debates soon b/c the contest of who's more out of touch is completely irrelevant to me, and frankly bores me to death.
  • imagecaden:
    imageIrishBrideND:

    On another not,e I don't think Romney stands a chance at saying the right thing. Because of his wealth, people are either going to think he is being insinsere if he tries to go one way, and that he can't relate if he goes the other. He is screwed either way on these sorts of issues.  

    Agreed completely. All of these controversial statements are viewed through the prism of our own bias. The left will see Rosen's comment as true b/c in context it makes sense to them. I view a lot of Romney's so-called insensitive comments the same way -- I get what he's trying to say. I hope we can get back to policy debates soon b/c the contest of who's more out of touch is completely irrelevant to me, and frankly bores me to death.

    Agreed.  Honestly, I think it's going to come down to.....do you want Obama in office again, or don't you?  Not, gee do you think Romney is so out of touch or don't you? 

    And so I say to you, you are Peter, and upon this Rock I will build my Church, and the gates of Hell shall not prevail against it.
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