cincybearcat wrote:What I got out of this:
1) I hate twitter
2) I love daycare, so I know it's hard work for stay at home mom's. But the struggle is far different then being a woman i a workplace, so Hilary is correct in that Ann Romney shouldn't be the poster child for the Romney campaign about women in the workplace/economy.
3) When discussing any topic nowadays, words have to be so carefully chosen that we will be missing out on good thoughts and ideas for fear of a misstep. We need to create open dialogue instead of just rush to be outraged about everything.
cincybearcat wrote:
But the struggle is far different then being a woman i a workplace, so Hilary is correct in that Ann Romney shouldn't be the poster child for the Romney campaign about women in the workplace/economy.
cincybearcat wrote:What I got out of this:
1) I hate twitter
2) I love daycare, so I know it's hard work for stay at home mom's. But the struggle is far different then being a woman i a workplace, so Hilary is correct in that Ann Romney shouldn't be the poster child for the Romney campaign about women in the workplace/economy.
3) When discussing any topic nowadays, words have to be so carefully chosen that we will be missing out on good thoughts and ideas for fear of a misstep. We need to create open dialogue instead of just rush to be outraged about everything.
hedonist wrote:cincybearcat wrote:What I got out of this:
1) I hate twitter
2) I love daycare, so I know it's hard work for stay at home mom's. But the struggle is far different then being a woman i a workplace, so Hilary is correct in that Ann Romney shouldn't be the poster child for the Romney campaign about women in the workplace/economy.
3) When discussing any topic nowadays, words have to be so carefully chosen that we will be missing out on good thoughts and ideas for fear of a misstep. We need to create open dialogue instead of just rush to be outraged about everything.
Definitely with you on your first and third points, cincy.
As to your second one, I'm not a parent but can imagine the difficulties on both sides of working women, be it inside or outside the home. Each have their own hurdles but are dissimilar situations and not necessarily comparable.
brianlux wrote:I have no trouble supporting the notion of motherhood being a full-time, important and difficult job. What I do have a problem with is the idea of having five kids (all hers) in a world with a population that recently topped SEVEN BILLION!
brianlux wrote:I have no trouble supporting the notion of motherhood being a full-time, important and difficult job. What I do have a problem with is the idea of having five kids (all hers) in a world with a population that recently topped SEVEN BILLION!
inlet13 wrote:But further, my real issue is - Who the F is she to be saying who CAN and CAN'T be a spokesperson on "the economy" or on "women"? What's her background in economics to dismiss another person's background? Ann Romney is also a Mom and has female parts, so I think she's got the woman thing down. Hilary Rosen is a political commentator - she has no background in economics to my knowledge. I think it's pretty hypocritical to make a snap judgment that another woman can't make economic arguments due to her work background (as a stay at home Mom), when she has little economic background herself.
brianlux wrote:I have no trouble supporting the notion of motherhood being a full-time, important and difficult job. What I do have a problem with is the idea of having five kids (all hers) in a world with a population that recently topped SEVEN BILLION!
inlet13 wrote:My response - I was more "outraged" by her twitter comments, which followed the original comment. But, the original comment that women who stay at home "don't work" is complete and total BS, regardless of the person involved. It's out of line.
Kat wrote:It was a really dumb thing to say and is being all blown up because of the elections. She'd have a hard time saying something more stupid, unfortunately. What a huge waste of time too.
Hillary, this one's for you.
Also, if she felt she had to call a campaign on something, she sure could have said it better.
Hilary Rosen @hilaryr
When I said @AC360 Ann Romney never worked I meant she never had to care for her kids AND earn a paycheck like MOST American women! #Truth
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