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Title: "Never Worked a Day in Her Life"
Source: Vox Populi
URL Source: http://voxday.blogspot.com/
Published: Apr 13, 2012
Author: Vox Day
Post Date: 2012-04-13 15:02:47 by Turtle
Keywords: None
Views: 408
Comments: 19

James Taranto correctly excoriates the feminist philosophy that served as the foundation for Hilary Rosen's epically stupid attack on Ann Romney:

In truth, anti-momism was the very heart of "The Feminine Mystique." Friedan's argument was that motherhood and homemaking were soul-deadening occupations and that pursuing a professional career was the way for a woman to "become complete." She agreed with the midcentury misogynists that a stay-at-home mother was, in Friedan's words, "castrative to her husband and sons." But she emphasized that women were "fellow victims."

The book might as well have been titled "Why Can't a Woman Be More Like a Man?" Today, of course, she can, and because feminism has entailed a diminution of male responsibility, she often has no choice. As we've noted, an increasing number of women are choosing domestic life, finding it a liberating alternative to working for a boss. But to do so requires a husband with considerable means.

Fifty years ago, Ann Romney's life would have made her just a regular woman. Today, she is a countercultural figure--someone who lives in a way that the dominant culture regards with a hostile disdain. And she has chosen to live that way, which is why Hilary Rosen, as an intellectual heiress to Betty Friedan, regards her as a villain rather than a victim.

Taranto also points out something that I consider vital. He effectively draws the distinction between Romney's accomplishments and Rosen's: "Raising children is a lot of work, and we'd venture to say it's more valuable work than, say, lobbying for the music industry or helping BP with its crisis communications, to name two of the highlights of Rosen's career."

I'll go even farther. Bearing and raising children is far more important than anything any working woman has ever done in her professional career in the entire history of Mankind. The silly, short-sighted, white trash teen mothers on MTV are contributing more to the human race than the most intelligent, highly educated, and accomplished women have ever done for it.

If a woman wants to devote sixteen or more years of her life to "education", then follow it up by sitting in a cubicle and transferring information from point A to point B, that's her legal right. But it's not doing anything for the human race, and indeed, considering the economically negative effects of the government agencies and human resources departments where women are inordinately employed, economic irrelevance is probably the best case scenario.

Linda Hirschman once claimed: "“The tasks of housekeeping and child-rearing are not worthy of the full time and talents of intelligent and educated human beings.”

But she had it wrong. She had it completely backwards, because there is absolutely nothing a woman, however educated and intelligent, can do that is more important or more vital than raising children. And while home-making not the physical equivalent of working in a coal mine, it is at least as laborious as most white collar employment. I have no affection for Captain Underoos and if he wins in November I think he will probably be even worse than Obama has been. But it is as evil as it is stupid to attack his wife for doing the one thing that the human race absolutely requires for its survival.

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#4. To: Turtle (#0)

Presidential Election Suggests Climax of Feminism is at Hand

by W.F. Price on April 12, 2012

Following the Rush Limbaugh/Sandra Fluke controversy, the remarks about Augusta, the debate over free birth control and other appeals to American women from Democrats, prominent feminist and corporate shark Hilary Rosen waded into the debate by saying that Mitt Romney’s wife had no right to talk about the economy because she’d “never worked a day in her life.” Lots of people took offense because, obviously, a mother of five has a lot of work to do, whether or not it results in a corporate paycheck.

What’s interesting is that the debate is between two baby boomer females, both of whom chose different paths in life, and underscores the profound schism that has emerged between one America and the other. Ann Romney, mother of five, has chosen one path, and Hilary Rosen, although she did manage to conceive two children with donor sperm (she’s a lesbian), another.

What we are seeing here is the climax of second wave feminism, which really got going in the 1960s, as its adherents reach the peak of their political and economic power. However, despite the heights attained by people like Hilary Rosen, not all American women jumped on the bandwagon, and now the two versions of American womanhood are squaring off over the presidency. You could say it’s essentially feminists vs. wives, and it’s pretty clear which ones will line up with which candidate.

In the long run, the wives will win, because they have a lot more children in general, but for now the feminists probably have a majority due to the large numbers of single mothers and divorced women, which is why Obama will likely take the women’s vote. But he isn’t going to take all of it.

I’m not sure how much longer feminism will be such a powerful force in national politics, but I suspect this election, and perhaps the next one, will be the peak. After that, there will be a decline that, while not entirely noticeable at first, should really become apparent by some time in the next decade. Younger feminists simply don’t have the passion or cohesion to repeat the successes of the Hilary Rosens and Hillary Clintons of the world. As far as I can tell, to them feminism means little more than getting a free lunch. At least, they don’t articulate much else, and if they can get a free lunch by getting married and having children a lot of them will do so and quickly forget all about the gender studies classes they took in college. Furthermore, as I’ve stressed recently, a lot more young white Americans will be the children of the Mitt and Ann Romneys of the US (not to mention Rick Santorums) than they will of the Hilary Rosens. Feminism is simply going to be alien and weird to an increasing proportion of the population. As for minorities, they never really bought into it anyway; feminism has been pretty much a white woman’s game from the beginning.

So, men, I think we should sit back, grab a bag of popcorn, and watch how it all goes down. We are witnessing the culmination of a very strange era in Western history, and it’s going to be history fairly soon. There’s no telling exactly what will come next, but I’m fairly certain that the feminism that has come to define this election cycle will begin to ebb away as something new emerges.

Some day when I’m old and gray, I expect to see people snicker and joke about the feminism that was such a powerful force in the late 20th and early 21st centuries. Our current era will be seen by young adults and children as just as alien as the prewar era is to us today. And no, there will never be a matriarchal regime; that’s against human nature and unprecedented in human history. People simply haven’t changed that much, and due to birth control, abortion and other factors that limit feminist fertility the demographic momentum is pushing in the other direction now, and has been for over a generation.

In the meanwhile, we men should take care of ourselves, our families and our brethren. Just hang in there, weather this storm, and try to keep your mental and physical health. When we get through to the other side, we’ll be able to breathe a lot easier than we have in a long, long time.

www.the-spearhead.com/

Lysander_Spooner  posted on  2012-04-13   16:09:49 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#9. To: Lysander_Spooner (#4)

and Hilary Rosen, although she did manage to conceive two children with donor sperm (she’s a lesbian), another.

Gosh I am so shocked that a man hating lesbian would find normal motherhood objectionable. /sarcasm

"Feminism is the theory, lesbianism is the practice." -- Ti-Grace Atkinson

Original_Intent  posted on  2012-04-14   13:27:54 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


Replies to Comment # 9.

#17. To: Original_Intent, turtle (#9)

Gosh I am so shocked that a man hating lesbian would find normal motherhood objectionable. /sarcasm

"Feminism is the theory, lesbianism is the practice." -- Ti-Grace Atkinson

Teh troooph !!!

I dated one of them feminists once, always squawking about 'eeeekqwualiteee', and then asking me why I don't buy her things....lol

I replied: "Why dear, because I'm not a pimp and you're not a hooker", shut her trap for awhile...lol.

Of course, I earned 5 times her income and had double her IQ, but she insisted she was to be in charge, come to think of it I think I did hear she is lapping up the grrrrrrrl gash, ewwwwwwwww :)

Lysander_Spooner  posted on  2012-04-16 17:29:48 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


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