Darth Wong wrote:Diomedes wrote:As I said, your post is there for everyone to see, and if you really need to believe that what you wrote was a fine example of clarity of thought and communication, go ahead. But you're not going to win any points with me by trying to portray yourself as the hapless victim of a politically correct witchhunt.
It's not about victimization; it's about the fact that you took the first two sentences out of the post and pretended that was the entire argument. Later, you even attempted to portray the rest of the post as some kind of backpedaling trick, as if I actually
intended the first two sentences to be the entire argument and then backpedaled by continuing to type. That kind of dishonest bullfuckery characterizes your entire argument.
The proviso you put towards the end of your first post was quite weak. You said "if the woman hates that role". Not "if the women dislikes, feels unfulfilled by, or overly stressed by", but
hates. Followed by "then some accomodation should be made". Not "then she shouldnt have to" - some accommodation implies relatively minor compromise. In the context of your post, and the issues with word choice, with priming it with "I'm throwing out PC" and admitting that it's sexist, this conditionality it barely blunts your claim. Now, you're going to come screaming in here about how I'm getting all uptight about semantics, and I dont enjoy talking about semantics but it seems like you genuinely dont understand how your post could be interpreted the way it was, so I do this simply to help make that clear to you.
Well that's a lie, and a stupid one considering it's easy to return to page two and see that my claims regarding the trends and correlations as just that, and that I acknowleged that every relationship is different and that couples in traditional roles can be perfectly happy. Nowhere did I say that women who stay home are universally submissive or weak, that was just your rather convenient mischaracterisation of my argument.
Actually, your argument is a textbook case in scientific ignorance, specifically your ignorance of method. I stated that given a conditional statement (which you ignored), society will be better off if people raise their own kids. I acknowledged that there are exceptions to every rule, which you attempted to mischaracterize as being equivalent to your use of correlations with uncontrolled variables. There is a
HUGE difference between exceptions and uncontrolled variables built into correlations; anyone with even a smidgen of understanding of the basic concept of scientific inquiry would know that. So no, the fact that I acknowledge exceptions does NOT validate your use of correlations with uncontrolled variables. They are NOT the same thing, and "acknowledging that every relationship is different" does not excuse it either.
What we've got here is some evidence versus none, and it's not surprising when you cant find anything to support your argument that the only avenue left would be to attempt to write off anything that contradicts your claim.
Right now you're basically trying to say that "Oh, the results are negative because for most of those families there will be other variables that make the mother staying home be associated with all these bad effects". But if we're talking about the real world and if you're right, then whatever these other variables are do exist, and it seems that your general recommendation on gender roles doesnt take into account that therefore for most couples it
wont "work out better for everyone".
If you want to make a more limited claim, not just "if everyone's willing to accept traditional gender roles", and not just if the woman doesnt
hate it, but also as long as everything else in this couples lives conform to a fairly utopian ideal that evidently only a minority of traditional families actually live in, that
then it all works out for the better - well, you'll still only have the appeal to specialisation rather than any evidence that outcomes are better, but your claim would be a lot more defensible.
I dont think there's much of a substantive difference between the two. Unless you can point out significant differences in the meaning of "happy" and "willing", and "happy" and "better off" in the context of family wellbeing.
There's your whole problem: you think that people have children in order to make themselves happy.
No, I think that happiness is a secondary objective. Not irrelevent. And in fact, parental happiness will feed into the primary objective of producing and rearing well adjusted children capable of reaching their full potential. Surely you agree that happiness and marital satisfaction of parents is positive for children.
This whole argument was raised before in another thread, when studies were cited which indicate that the people with the highest happiness levels have no kids at all. When I say that everyone will be better off, I'm talking about accomplishing your goals most effectively. If you want to sit there, accomplish nothing, and be happy with that, then don't have kids at all. Why do you think I keep calling parenting a "job" instead of "entertainment"? You don't do it for your own happiness; you do it because it's something you want to accomplish in life, and you want to do that as well as possible. Your fundamental misunderstanding of this concept is clearly due to ignorance of the entire process.
You're talking about accomplishing your goals most effectively - I'm talking about choosing the option that allows you to accomplish your goals most effectively while also maximising happiness and minimising stress, psychological distress, marital disfunction. I've shown that outcomes for children are either weakly positive, neutral, or weakly negative for working parents compared to traditional families - the most important outcomes are the same. If the two means achieve the same ends with regards to children, I'm saying dont advocate means to most people that which for most people will be sub-optimal for them as parents.
Optimal for the happines and stability of their family. Having enough children to maintain the population is important, but if there are ways or organising the family that lead to more optimal outcomes in marriage satisfaction, reduce likelihood of divorce, improve outcomes for children's education and health, then those should be chosen. Stress may be a necessary consequence of a worthwhile decision, but if equally or more worthwhile means to the same ends are available, it's stupid to choose the more stressful method.
People who raise kids aren't doing it for their own relaxation, moron. Of course it increases stress; I worry about my kids every goddamned day. The closer you are to the activity, the more parenting-related stress you will feel. That doesn't mean it's a bad choice, because ou give up control when you hand the kids off to someone else. People voluntarily take on this stress because it's about accomplishing goals, not helping themselves relax. What kind of imbecile thinks that women who stay home to raise their kids do so in an attempt to lower their own stress level? Your whole argument is riddled with non sequiturs like this, where you try to connect completely mismatched objectives and means of measuring success.
Do you truly misunderstand my argument to such a degree or is this just a strawman tactic? On the one hand, I could try and reformulate it for you, but on the other hand looking at the paragraph you just replied to, that paragraph already explains it simply enough. If you read it and understood it you'll know that I'm already taking that having children, and providing them with optimal outcomes is already assumed to be the number one priority. But if most people will be happier achieving that one way versus another, why on earth should the average couple choose the option that decreases marital satisfaction and all the rest?
You cling to your bizarre delusion that people have kids in order to make themselves happy (that's why stupid teenaged girls have kids, but not intelligent adults), or in order to relax (not even teenaged girls think that), and then you crow that if a particular parenting method does not achieve these goals, then it's not working out. You have absolutely no clue, do you?
You cant be this stupid. You know that isnt my argument. Are
you so desperate that you need to mischaracterise my argument in such a way?
Your point regarding evolution only addresses the issue of whether the father or mother should stay home, not whether one parent must stay home versus both working. What have you really presented in favour of your claim?
For the umpteenth time, specialized division of labour, which is well-understood to work for everyone. This is an argument taken from industry, which you discount because you refuse to admit that parenting is a
job rather than some sort of self-indulgence or relaxation exercise.
You sort of remind me of free market fundamentalists who say, government spending is always inefficient, the market is always efficient, and then blindly apply that principle to any policy without taking into consideration a lot of the complexities and, well, the human side.
I think there's a downside to someone specialising in a job that makes them unhappy. If there's a job that neither of the two workers involved want to specialise in, and would become distressed and dissatisfied in, it may in the long run be better for them to either split that job between them or outsource a portion of it. Marriages arent the same as industry - in industry you can hire people, fire people, increase their rewards - there's no way to account for inequitable division of labour in marriages, and you've got two main workers that you cant afford to lose. If you dont manage working conditions in such a way as to maintain stability you risk having the family unit break apart altogether. And like industry, you ignore worker morale at your peril - when workers have low morale they're less likely to be as productive.
If such specialisation in the modern world lead to significantly superior outcomes in the primary objective of raising well adjusted children and all that, then that would trump any concerns about morale. But that doesnt seem to be the case, and it seem that in general, whether due inherently to the nature of traditional marriages or to external variables that impact upon the experience of traditional marriage, for most people, morale suffers significantly.
Again, if the outcome for children is equivalent, you cant make a general recommendation that people choose the means to that end that will lead to less satisfying marriages.
So what else have you presented in support of your argument? Well, you've mentioned specialisation in jobs. But you ignore research on the psychological effects of being a stay-at-home mum, and the decreased marital satisfaction and stability associated with it.
I do not "ignore" it; I point out that it is irrelevant to the objectives. Parenting is an objective-oriented activity; you are tring to achieve a goal. It is not about self-indulgence or relaxation, no matter how much you might pretend otherwise.
You and I both agree that the primary objective is to provide the most benefit to the children, but are you seriously saying that being happy and satisfied in doing so is of no importance whatsoever?
Furthermore, the specialisation argument would actually seem to support sending children to day-care, where professionals truly specialise in childcare - as opposed to a typical stay-at-home mother who must split her time between homemaking and looking after the kids.
For one thing, the level of qualification required to be a day-care worker is a joke. For another, the ratio between caregivers and children makes this argument a joke.
What is the purpose of day-care? I would say that the first objective is to provide a safe environment, but that any additional benefit beyond this should be considered positive. Such benefits might include socialisation and stimulation. In fact, some of the studies I read indicate that children who attend day care are less likely to demonstrate dependency issues, less likely to be "clingly" and less likely to be distressed in various social situations. The fact that caregivers can conduct group activities renders the criticism of caregiver to child ratios a poor one.
I'd also like to point out, since we've been talking about evolutionary roles, that for most of humanity's existence childrearing was probably more communal - probably more like that of the daycare situation. Marriage and monogamy were probably not a feature in the family models we evolved through. Isolated mothers caring for only their own children was probably an unnatural state.
I think that a proper evaluation needs to look at the results, not just the theory. So no, you havnt done enough to support your argument. Apart from the assumption that specialisation should result in better outcomes for the family, you havnt presented anything at all, let alone properly addressed the contradictory evidence I've presented.
Outcomes cannot be measured without reference to objectives. One does not measure the success of a fuel economy improvement project by looking at quarter-mile times. So far, your argument is predicated upon the assumption that the objective of raising kids is to make yourself happier or more relaxed: a preposterous position to take. My argument is predicated upon the assumption that parents make parenting decisions based on their desire to have maximum control over the way their children are raised: a proposition which is much easier to justify in light of actual observed parent behaviour.
Ah, so now your argument is changing to one about "maximum control". I thought it was about "working out better for everyone", a more general claim that would involve truly important outcomes such as a child's psychological wellbeing and academic achievement. Not to mention that parents would seem to be included in "everyone".
If you want to argue that parents having "maximum control" over children is what's most important, I'll let you go on your merry way and we can end the debate here. But if the most important objectives relate to a child's wellbeing, I have provided evidence indicating that there's no significant difference in outcomes for children through either parenting style.
It is with this established that we can look at secondary objectives, because unlike you I think that once the primary objective is assured, happiness and satisfaction for parents is in fact worth considering.
It seems to me that the logical place for you to find evidence to support your argument would be to look for studies on outcomes for children - if the outcomes for children are significantly better in families with a stay-at-home mum, that might outweigh the negative effects on the parents' relationship. Why on earth do I need to tell you how to debate?
Unfortunately, sociological studies have been an ideological morass for the entire history of the field, going back to the early studies showing that divorce had no negative impact whatsoever on kids (which, interestingly enough, use almost exactly the same methods used by the studies you cited in your subsequent post, which attempted to prove the same thing about handing off your kids to institutions and which were contradicted by subsequent studies).
More recent research indicates that divorce is most harmful when no apparent tensions existed in the marriage, while it is less harmful or even in fact benefical if the marriage is perceived by the children to be disfunctional. But anyway, let me get this straight - you dont like the field of research, so you're going to ignore any research it outputs? So rather than actually address their arguments and the data and methods used, you're going to ignore it because of who they are, because of the field they're in? I think there's a word for that fallacy.
It doesn't help that you need a high income to be able to afford to keep a parent home, or that many single-income families are actually single-income because of involuntary unemployment rather than a conscious decision (almost a quarter of minimum-wage earners are sole breadwinners for their families; a horrendous situation). Labour studies have been far more controlled, which is why I based my argument upon division of labour.
It seems like you're maneuvering yourself into a position where your claim only applies to the minority of couples who live in just the right ideal conditions. It would have been a lot easier if you'd limited your claim in such a way in the beginning.
My argument's made of thin air? Now that's projection. I've presented a significant amount of evidence on the kinds of harmful effects correlated with traditional gender roles in marriages.
All based upon your laughable assumption that parents have kids in order to make themselves happier or more relaxed, leaving aside the "uncontrolled variable" issue which you have already demonstrated that you don't understand at all, based on your comical attempt to equate it to the concept of exceptions to rules.
See above, there's really nothing new here.
Nice, try to shift the burden of evidence onto me.
I made an argument based on effective output and division of labour, based upon ironclad results from industry.
Why dont you admit that you came into this debate without one clue as to the actual effects of different marriage models on outcomes for children and parents in the real world? You've made an assumption based on an the application of an oversimplified principle of efficiency in industry to families, where there are fundamental differences - hell, take a very basic one, such as that for working individuals work (however unsatisfying it may be) can be left there when they return home - for stay-at-home mothers work
is home, and if that's not satisfying there's no escape. The world would be a lot simpler if people were machines, but unfortunately sometimes their activities are complicated by psychological factors, as irrational as they may be, that can nullify the superior efficiency that they should achieve on paper.
You attacked it by citing various studies that don't actually relate to the subject, unless one adopts your bizarre assumptions about the reasons people have kids. Sorry, but YOU bear the burden of proof to show why my argument is wrong, since you keep saying it's wrong but you produce no real evidence other than the kind of studies which get tossed back and forth because there are just as many studies saying exactly the opposite thing, thanks to the nature of sociology.
Attack the field, rather than the research - that's quite pathetic. The fact is, you havnt done one bit of research to see where the preponderance of evidence lies.
You're the one who made the claim, and one of the biggest problems is that you dont present any specific elements to refute - just an appeal to the principle of specialisation.
Which you ignore because you have no real rebuttal to it, and because in your spectacular ignorance, you fail to understand that parenting is a form of labour, not self-relaxation.
"I dont care what the real world says, traditional parenting
should be more efficient because families are the same as industry! It just
must be so!".
"Talk not of flight, for I shall not listen to you: I am of a race that knows neither flight nor fear, and my limbs are as yet unwearied." Battle with Aeneas and Pandarus - Book V