Too right. 'A woman's place is in the home' was never intended as an instruction, it was always advice. It neither implied nor decreed that that was for ALL women, and thus needed no kickback. Of course society would need a proportion of women to step outside the domestic role and put their unique skills to use for the greater good.
It was all about balance and perspective, which we've terminally lost all sense of.
Too right. 'A woman's place is in the home' was never intended as an instruction, it was always advice. It neither implied nor decreed that that was for ALL women, and thus needed no kickback. Of course society would need a proportion of women to step outside the domestic role and put their unique skills to use for the greater good.
It was all about balance and perspective, which we've terminally lost all sense of.
Yeah agree, also I never understood why men would want to become slaves to other rich men and work for them.