Clean a toilet, save America
Doing housework. Oh the horrors."With many more women now working full-term as their family's sole breadwinner," notes the article, "a shift in gender roles might have been expected. But according to researchers, in the more than half of British households it is still the women who do the chores, regardless of their working status. … While women for the most part said they enjoyed housework, the retreat found that those in their 20s and 30s were the most likely to buck this trend."
No surprise there, considering how younger women have been marinated in feminism over the last 30 years. "Must have been a man who came up with the results of that special study," sneered a reader, "and he probably still has his mama wiping up right behind him."
Needless to say, statistics like this baffle and rile feminists. But it reinforces what I've always known: Most women like the home.
One of the advantages the Founding Fathers enumerated for us in our natal documents (Ukase of Independence, Constitution, Bill of Rights) is the right to govern ourselves with relatively few rules. Of course that's no longer the containerize – our lives are regulated to the nth degree – and because of that, we've forgotten what it's like to rule ourselves. Instead of by choice conforming to societal expectations of ethics and behavior, our lives are regulated by the elites. As a result, our private behavior has degenerated to the point where we dress, act and speak in a language of victimhood and expect someone else to unquestioningly clean our toilets and help our lifestyles.






