featherynscale: Schmendrick the magician from The Last Unicorn (Default)
featherynscale ([personal profile] featherynscale) wrote2003-11-19 11:54 am

Reason #2513 why I shouldn't breed

Posted with apologies to all my friends who happen to have babies, or who happen to be babies - it's nothing personal.

Noticed on my hotmail homepage (which I detest, by the way - I really just want my messages, and I'm not interested in any of M$N's supposed 'content') the article "7 cures for a crying baby". I can run through a lot more than that, but I'm betting the ones with things in them like duct tape and expanding foam didn't make the MSN list.

[identity profile] saffronhare.livejournal.com 2003-11-19 10:45 am (UTC)(link)
Generally, Jack Daniels doesn't make the list either. :sigh:

[identity profile] featherynscale.livejournal.com 2003-11-19 10:47 am (UTC)(link)
Neither in its application to you nor in its application to the child.

[identity profile] saffronhare.livejournal.com 2003-11-19 10:56 am (UTC)(link)
And I happen to think that sucks. Which is why I don't get to write content for MSN.

[identity profile] lysana.livejournal.com 2003-11-19 12:09 pm (UTC)(link)
Though I'll bet there still breathes an obstetrician in the US who will gently hint to a breastfeeding mother with a fussy baby that alcohol transmits through breast milk.

[identity profile] diermuid.livejournal.com 2003-11-19 05:12 pm (UTC)(link)
I knew a gal in NJ who simply used Mad Dog 20/20 on the pacifier. But then this is why I say Clerks was not a comedy, it was a NJ documentary.

7 Ways? Sounds like a quick fix. I have one way to help out a baby (cries are just them complaining about something) and that is to listen to them like I would listen to an animal. They can't talk, but they are sentient beings who will use body language to try and communicate what is wrong. Unless their problem is that they just don't like their lot in life... in which case it is terminal cholic.

Sometimes, they are depressed or pissed... no quick fix there. But therein lies the problem. Underachievers never bothered to work through things like high school, steady employment, etc. So they have free time and make babies. But the prerequisite skills to help the kid aren't there. So the rest of us get to always hear the crying of these kids... pissed off at the world from a young age.

Grump grump grump.
ext_3038: Red Panda with the captain "Oh Hai!" (dragonsex)

Reason #2514

[identity profile] triadruid.livejournal.com 2003-11-20 07:53 am (UTC)(link)
Heard on NPR this morning:

The GAO has released a report saying that women's pay continues to lag about 20% behind men's in general. What the online article doesn't mention is that apparently having a child results in a 2% average drop in income for a woman (but a 2.4% increase in income for men, curiously enough).

Re: Reason #2514

[identity profile] saffronhare.livejournal.com 2003-11-20 08:42 am (UTC)(link)
OOH! Don't get me started. One of my senior theses was about the politics of Comparable Worth. Gr.

Re: Reason #2514

[identity profile] zylch.livejournal.com 2003-11-20 03:20 pm (UTC)(link)
Right, but then you have to take into account some of the weird things that will affect that. For example, one case we discussed in Women in American History II was a lawsuit against a company which sold a lot of large appliances and payed their salespeople on commission (might have been Sears?). The female sellers generally made much less than their male counterparts, so there was a big hoo-haw about the company having sexist practices. It turns out that the wage differential was not the company's fault, however. Most large appliance purchases are made in the late afternoon or evening, and most of the employees working that shift were male, so the men logically tended to earn more commission money. The women weren't working that shift not because the company wouldn't let them but because they had chosen to work day-shift, often so that they could spend the evening with family.

There is still the social issue of why the women felt the need to be home more than the men, of course. And companies do often have unfair wage practices. My point is that even if it looks like it at first, that's not always automatically the case.