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Rabbi Shmuley Boteach

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Would Hilary Rosen Have Criticized Stay-at-Home Dads as Never Having Worked?

Posted: 04/13/2012 12:22 pm

It's good that Hilary Rosen apologized for her comments that Ann Romney, who chose to be a stay-at-home mom to raise her five boys, had 'never worked a day in her life.' It took a day for Rosen to finally acknowledge that her comments were unhelpful, but she finally said, "I apologize to Ann Romney and anyone else who was offended."

Now, I am opposed to the culture of offense where people look to be offended by some public comment. We all need to chill a little and stop pouncing on each other. People can express their opinions without it always leading to a culture war. But Rosen's comments are different and I'm saying that not as someone running for Congress but as someone who has counseled thousands of women, many of them stay-at-home moms.

Too many have told me that they already feel inferior. Their husbands get to go out of the house and have a change of scenery. They get paid for their work and therefore often feel more appreciated and have greater control of the family's finances and spending. Many stay-at-home moms still have to ask their husbands for money or are degradingly given allowances for the families needs, something I have always railed against. With rare exceptions, a couple's money should be equally pooled, as should most things in marriage. But too many husbands feel that they are the breadwinners and their wives have not earned their share of the family income. So why should they have equal say in how it is spent?

Not that Rosen doesn't have any validity to her points, either. Indeed, she is correct. Many moms would choose to be at home, but they can't. The family is desperate for the second income. But even so, Rosen's unnecessarily demeaning comments against stay-at-home mothers -- and I'm happy to believe her that she never intended her remarks to be insulting -- reinforce a negative stereotype that mothers who are at home are not pulling their weight or earning their fair share.

Let's turn the tables for a moment. There is a growing movement on the part of husbands to be stay-at-home dads while their wives go out and earn the bacon (I apologize for the deep offense I have now no doubt caused my Jewish readers). A 2008 US Census publication puts the number of married fathers who work in the home as their children's primary caregivers at approximately 140,000. Now, would Rosen have said the same thing about these men, that they never worked a single day in their lives, or would she, as have so many others, praised them for their maternal role in putting their children first? Would she have lauded their ability to get beyond the traditional macho-man role and prioritizing their family even before their careers? So if Rosen is going to rail against a war against women, then let's agree that a gender bias that praises men who put their kids first but punishes women for the same is an unfair assault in that battle.

For the record, I am actually an advocate of women having a profession even when they are near full-time mothers. It constitutes advice I often give unhappy wives who come to me for counseling. Get out of the house more and develop your career. If you don't need the money, volunteer for charity.

My wife and I are blessed with nine children. But my wife has always worked alongside me in everything I have done. And I have raised my six daughters to do all the things that I have done with my boys.

Women are the equal of men in all ability and professionalism and I believe in encouraging our daughters to be both moms and professionals, simply because human beings seek the dignity that comes with both.

We acknowledge, on the one hand, that we are links in a higher chain of existence and raise our children to continue that chain. But in addition, we are people in our own right and seek the maximum development of our individualism irrespective of our position in a family.

Still, this is my opinion. Others may disagree. And that's the whole point of the need for Rosen's apology. Rosen is a political consultant with two kids. G-d bless her. It's beautiful that she has chosen to do both. But it is not for her to judge other people's choices. Besides, if Rosen had had five kids rather than two -- and Mormons, like Jews, have large families -- she might have found it slightly more challenging to sustain her career.

The point is that everyone contributes in their own way, and it's time for us to all stop assailing and judging each other. Not only is it important to reverse the culture of taking offense, it's also important to curb a culture that gives it, too.

Written in memory of Machla Dabakarov, the mother of a dear friend of Rabbi Shmuley, who passed away last year.

Shmuley Boteach, America's Rabbi, is the international best-selling author of 27 books and has just Kosher Jesus. He is currently running for Congress from new Jersey's Ninth District. Follow him on Twitter @RabbiShmuley. His website is www.shmuleyforcongress.com.

 
 
 

Follow Rabbi Shmuley Boteach on Twitter: www.twitter.com/RabbiShmuley

It's good that Hilary Rosen apologized for her comments that Ann Romney, who chose to be a stay-at-home mom to raise her five boys, had 'never worked a day in her life.' It took a day for Rosen to fin...
It's good that Hilary Rosen apologized for her comments that Ann Romney, who chose to be a stay-at-home mom to raise her five boys, had 'never worked a day in her life.' It took a day for Rosen to fin...
 
 
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itolduso
lateral thinker
01:06 PM on 04/16/2012
With all due respect Rabbi- Ms. Rosen was not criticizing Mrs. Romneys CHOICE to be at 'stay at home mom'...she was criticizing MITT ROMNEY'S CHOICE of using his wife's experiences to gain perspective on women's economic issues....and Ms Rosen was correct- Mrs. Romney's experiences offer a very unrealistic, narrow, limited perspective on the economic issues that most American women face. Mr. Romney's exclusive reliance on her 'view' could have extremely negative repercussions on women if he wins election, because she really doesn't have a clue about what keeps us up at night.
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08:45 PM on 04/15/2012
Would Romney have criticize men the way he does poor women...
that's the question. Nothing is ever said about the poor, men or women. Not even a child of the cloth says anything about that.
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John Genryu
Zen Buddhist priest/IT Consultant
05:16 PM on 04/15/2012
"It's good that Hilary Rosen apologized for her comments..."

No, since Hilary was right the first time.

"My wife and I are blessed with nine children."

Irresponsible. Use birth control.

"it's time for us to all stop assailing and judging each other."

Then your article would never have been written.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
BannedFromCommenting
♼ ♼ PLEASE RECYCLE TROLLS ♼ ♼
02:37 PM on 04/16/2012
I wonder who did like the MAJORITY of the laundry, cooking and cleaning too, to raise those 9 blessed children.. I doubt it was a 50/50 job if she worked along side him at his job.
05:05 PM on 04/16/2012
Actually, they hired people to help them raise their kids, yet another example of the disingenuous nature of this article.
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Semprini
Stamp out and abolish redundancy
05:05 PM on 04/16/2012
Excellent post.
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ColoradoTaxpayer
If u didn't vote-you have no right to complain
02:34 PM on 04/15/2012
As I read these comments I keep having the memories of raising kids in the 80's. everything that H Rosen stated is what I heard as a young women before I had kids and it stuck with me as i had my own children. I felt that I had to go to work to be a productive person. I struggled juggling home and work. I tried to work after my 2nd but all I was doing was paying for daycare, so I stayed home for 2 years. During that time women made me feel inferior because I was at home raising my children and not pursuing my career. NOW is not for all women and I never felt they spoke for me. NOW has destroyed the family unit. There is a war on women and it comes from the liberal women who look down on SAHM's. Please be honest. Sarah Palin didn't start the war on her, neither did Michelle Bachmann. I am insulted by Rosen's comments. She spoke without thinking & to me she spoke her truth and what she firmly believes. Ann Romney may not have had to struggle as the rest of us have had to and I do not begrudge her fortune However, money can't buy health and the women has dealt with cancer and MS which shows that we are all the same, we all bleed red.
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LeftsideRebelYell
The wrench in social media
01:42 PM on 04/15/2012
I'm a stay-at-home Dad and I do not agree with this "man of the cloth". For him to miscategorize Rosen's statement is all I need to know about his perception abilities because if he can't get that right how could he be right about what I went through in the early 90's?
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edlobel
01:37 PM on 04/15/2012
Rabbi, you completely missed the point of what Ms. Rosen said! she was commenting on the fact that willard was using his wife to speak to women and then to REPORT back to him on what she found and that was most women were concerned about the ecomomy! Since ann romney had never been in the work force and was never considered an authority on working women, that whatever she had to say was only for political gain. Ms. Rosen was commenting on ann romney only and no other women! Ms. Rosen does NOT work for President OBAMA or anywhere in his administration. Nor does she work the Democratic National (or any local) Party. This was deliberate misrepresentation on the part of willard and repubs and tea baggers.
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BlackJAC
It's better to be a black king than a white knight
11:59 AM on 04/15/2012
In 1996, the Simpsons episode "Bart On The Road" had Principal Skinner start Go To Work With Your Parents Day because he needed to close the school a day early before Spring Break due to several mistakes with his vacation travel plans.  Bart says he's going to observe Marge during her day as a homemaker, but the school states that homemaker isn't a valid profession due to it being the expected responsibility of a good parent whose kids are too young to be left alone unsupervised.  Make sense now?
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urkiddinme
Former fatty turned fitness freak
04:03 PM on 04/16/2012
Love that episode and the show's take on real issues...that having been said, the responsibility of raising children who are too young to be left unsupervised is often subcontracted out to poorly paid uneducated foreign girls barely out of their teens themselves.
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Lloyd Cata
10:02 AM on 04/15/2012
MEANS, MOTIVE, & MITT

1st - "LIVING TAKES WORK"; life means every day there are 'responsibilities' every person has, whether it is cooking, cleaning, taking care of others, shopping, going to school, etc...etc...etc. Some people have the means and capacity to do all these things 'comfortably'...BUT MOST DO NOT!. Americans(men&women) struggle every day for the 'means' to provide the most basic needs for themselves and their families.

Ann Romney certainly knows the struggles of parenting, working at home, and personal challenges she herself has faced, BUT SHE HAS NEVER STRUGGLED FOR THE 'MEANS' TO OVERCOME -HER- PERSONAL CHALLENGES, unlike 'most' of the women in America. There is no refuting that fact, and for the MSM to project Mrs. Rosen's remark into political fodder is why "ignorance is popular" in America.

2nd - Mrs. Rosen has apologized for the 'phrasing of her remark', but the substance argument that Mrs. Romney knows the desperation of mothers who are being thrown out of their homes by greedy bankers, not having money for nutritious food, or the desperation when illness strikes and that fateful moment when the hospital asks how you intend to pay. SHE KNOWS 'NONE' OF THAT!

3rd - I have been a 'single-dad', and believe me...Ann Romney has no clue, and her biggest concern today is how much the government will spend on Mitt's California mansion to make it bulletproof. That may seem callous, or insensitive, but it is certainly not based on MSM ignorance.
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mtincali
We do the best when we work together..
10:29 AM on 04/15/2012
Well said, a Rabbi should know better.
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LeftsideRebelYell
The wrench in social media
01:43 PM on 04/15/2012
F&F
05:19 AM on 04/15/2012
Last paragraph sounds like a dig at Rosen for not having enough kids. See, it is easy to take one sentence out of context and make it look worse than it is.

The issue wasn't that raising kids wasn't work, it was that Mitt going to Ann for advice on women's economic issues isn't getting him a true picture of what working women face. Mitt and Ann have been fortunate enough that finances have never been an issue. Instead of trying to say he understands women's issues because of what his wife tells him maybe Mitt should talk to average working women (raising kids or in the workplace) and the struggles they face. For instance the struggle to be able to stay at home and raise the kids and still pay bills, save for college tuition and retirement. All issues the Romneys have never had to concern themselves with. That doesn't mean they can't understand, but that they need to reach out to those who deal with it to get the full picture.
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BlackJAC
It's better to be a black king than a white knight
12:00 PM on 04/15/2012
I'm an uncle twice over, and both my sister and my brother's wife have gone back to work despite their kids being infants because they need to get out of the house and have grown-up conversations.
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JewishPhysician
fraternity, trust, discourse
04:38 AM on 04/15/2012
It is a pity that this culture we enjoy likes to denigrate anyone who is not constantly employed in a partial or permanent work endeavor. Work comes in all forms and one may write or take care of their household. I would prefer overall to criticize someone for not voting personally.
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04:05 AM on 04/15/2012
Either the Rabbi didn't fully read or listen to Rosen's comments or he is purposely misinterpreting them to make his rather obvious point.
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tippisheadrun
Get 2 birds stoned at once
01:22 AM on 04/15/2012
Well Rabbi, if in the future a man suspends his education at the age of twenty, marries into wealth and privilege, chooses to remain at home with his five sons and Nanny, indeed stays at home after said kids and (presumably) Nanny have departed; if this man is married to the likely nominee for the Republican Presidential ticket, I can't speak for Hilary Rosen but I think I would probably say that he has never worked a day in his life.
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shrn
12:28 AM on 04/15/2012
Of course she would have. In this day and age staying at home with the children is a luxury most of can't afford. That's the point she was trying to make.

When I was growing up all moms stayed home and all dads worked. I wish it was that way now but it's not. The Romney boys seem like great young men and i'm sure Ann deserves credit for that, good for her. In reality though how much does she really know about the 99% of us that didn't have the opportunitys she had?
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openmissoula
Now Kiko's spirit will live in the happy frog!
12:16 AM on 04/15/2012
We're talking past the point that the GOP pushes policies that demean women and their work --- whether in or out of the home --- but they hide behind Ms. Romney to try to hide that fact from voters.
10:10 PM on 04/14/2012
A lot of people have misconscrewed what Ms. Rosen actually said. She didn't say there is anything wrong with being a stay at home mom or that being a stay at home mother is not a lot of work. She said that Ms. Romney hasn't worked. That is different from claiming stay home moms don't work. Anne Romney had housekeepers, nannies ect. as a child. She was taken care of not only by her mom, but by the hired help. So as a child, she didn't work much. Early in adulthood, she married a rich guy and continued to enjoy the privilege of a wealthy family plus new rich husband. Unless Ms. Romney gets on TV and says she didn't have 10 helpers around the house helping, then I am inclined to believe Ms. Rosen.

Ms. Romney doesn't know what it is to have to choose between the job that pays the bills and her sick child that needs her. She knows nothing of getting up two hours early to catch a bus to the daycare, drop off the child, catch a different bus to work, take a two hour ride to get the child, get home, cook, clean, wash, help with home work and the list goes on. Then, to go to work 8 hours and that job doesn't cover all the bills. Don't get me started.

Romney has done somethingsm I'm sure,but whatever she has done, she has done with the help that most of us cannot afford.