I did a search and found the original article by Gretchen Ritter that was the subject of the article I blogged about yesterday. The site requires registration, but I'll excerpt some of it here.
.... It denies men the chance to be involved fathers. This is a loss for them and a loss for their children. What does it mean when fathers are denied the opportunity to nurture their kids in ways that are as important as their work? What do the children miss when they don't have fathers changing their diapers, picking them up from school, coaching soccer, making breakfast or dinner and doing homework with them? On both sides, the answer is too much.Women who stay at home also lose out — they lose a chance to contribute as professionals and community activists. Parenting is an important social contribution. But we need women in medicine, law, education, politics and the arts. It is not selfish to want to give your talents to the broader community — it is an important part of citizenship to do so, and it is something we should expect of everyone.
Full-time mothering is also bad for children. It teaches them that the world is divided by gender. This sends the wrong message to our sons and daughters. I do not want our girls to grow up thinking they must marry and have children to be successful, or that you can only be a good mother if you give up your work.
Nor do I want boys to think that caring for families is women's work and making money is men's work. Our sons and daughters should grow up thinking that raising and providing for a family is a joint enterprise among all the adults in the family.
[....]
Finally, the stay-at-home mother movement is bad for society. It tells employers that women who marry and have children are at risk of withdrawing from their careers, and that men who marry and have children will remain fully focused on their careers, regardless of family demands. Both lessons reinforce sex discrimination.
This movement also privileges certain kinds of families, making it harder for others. The more stay-at-home mothers there are, the more schools and libraries will neglect the needs of working parents, and the more professional mothers, single mothers, working-class mothers and lesbian mothers will feel judged for their failure to be in a traditional family and stay home their children.
By creating an expectation that mothers could and should stay home, we lose sight of the fact that most parents do work — and that they need affordable, high quality child care, after-school enrichment programs and family leave policies that allow mothers and fathers to nurture their children without giving up work.
Later: Boudicca's take.
Posted by Ithildin at August 12, 2004 9:08 AM | PROCURE FINE OLD WORLD ABSINTHE
Okay, NOW I feel better about calling her a raving socialist nutter. :) Do the abysmal statistics on children brought up in daycare facilities carry no weight with her? And the larger point: If feminism is about choice, then when one woman chooses differently from you, it isn't your place to condemn her choice. Ritter obviously missed that part, which to me says she missed the whole point.
Posted by: ilyka at August 12, 2004 2:00 PMJust another nastily elitist condescension calling stay at home moms ignorant and passive. I'd love to show her how assertive I can be about her claim to superiority in deciding who is a better woman.
Man, men can get really ugly with each other, but not half as nasty and corrupting as women with each other.
Posted by: Sharon Ferguson at August 12, 2004 2:27 PMUnknown first commenter :), cool! I look forward to reading it.
Ilyka, I thought you might.
Sharon, we should challange her to a duel :)
Posted by: Ith at August 12, 2004 2:37 PMD'OH! Sorry, Ith. It was me. For some reason my info isn't saving and I forgot to reinsert!
Posting in 10 minutes. It turned into a huge rant. GRRRR!
Posted by: Boudicca at August 12, 2004 6:18 PMAhh!
The blog is broken when it comes to remembering info, I'm afraid.
Posted by: Ith at August 12, 2004 6:28 PM
This still pisses me off. I wrote a rant last night I'm posting tonight. I had found this article last night when researching it. I'll send everyone here (which I was going to do anyway since you found it originally)if they don't want to register to see what itis that I'm talking about.
I'm a strong woman. I never felt pushed into being a stay at home Mom. As a matter of fact, I don't know anyone who has. That's the beautiful thing about 2004, we women can make choices, whether they be influenced by economics or religion, or whatever outside sources.
Posted by: at August 12, 2004 1:00 PM