Opinion no one wants to have children anymore, and as a mom, I understand why

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no one wants to have children anymore, and as a mom, I understand why​

My experience with motherhood started in a cold hospital room filled with fluorescent lights and beeping machines. I was isolated from my daughter’s dad for reasons I can’t even fully remember, probably some fucked-up COVID protocol. While trying to concentrate on the breathing exercises I picked up from my Hypnobirthing book, the nurses and doctors surrounding me did absolutely nothing to support me emotionally, aside from offering one medication after another and getting increasingly impatient when I refused them.

After approximately 30 hours of desperately trying to cope with the most excruciating pain I’ve ever known, I gave in and let them inject the longest needle I’ve ever seen into my spine. I fell asleep. The next thing I remember was being woken up by the nurses, telling me I needed to push. Fast.

Just minutes after they woke me up and forced me to push, they placed my daughter on my chest. After the brief relief of knowing she was alive and well, I felt immense confusion about how I would ever catch up on that sleep. I never did.

Little did I know that the humiliation and isolation I experienced in that labor room were just the trailer for everything that was about to unfold. I walked into that hospital needing women to hold me through the most sacred experience of my life, but instead, I was treated like a problem to be managed— ideally as quickly and efficiently as humanly possible.

And if my birth story isn’t the perfect metaphor for what motherhood feels like in a capitalist, patriarchal society, I don’t know what is. Efficiency. Isolation. Gaslighting. Medication. Unsurprisingly, the system didn’t just fail me during labor. It kept failing me relentlessly in all the moments that came after, and it continues to do so, as if it once made a silent vow to keep punishing me for daring to expect more.

Since I’m not the only woman on this planet who damn well understands the underlying motivation to opt for a child-free life after experiencing the soul crushing reality of motherhood in the system we’re forced to mother in, I decided to include the voice of the fabulous Briana, along with insights from hundreds of mothers I polled on Instagram, in this essay.

The voices of women choosing to live a childfree life are getting louder and louder — and rightfully so. I think we can all agree that, much to the dismay of many men in the comment sections beneath those posts, women are done subscribing to the bullshit narrative we were fed as little girls. It took many of us a few messed-up relationships, abuse, and a whole lot of therapy to understand that this narrative wasn’t designed to serve us, merely to contain us.

Children’s books and Disney movies did an excellent job in convincing us that our highest calling was to become wives and mothers. That our value peaked when a man chose us and a baby ultimately completed us. But what we weren’t told is what happens after the fairytale ends. When your handsome prince suddenly wants to get blackout drunk with his boys instead of taking care of his child. When your pretty dresses aren’t possibly big enough to cover the isolating pain in your chest.
We weren’t told that motherhood can feel like a beautiful prison.

Personally, I gaslit myself for long enough into believing that it’s not actually that bad, but I’m done subscribing to the glamorous image of motherhood that has been sold to us for decades by the media. Motherhood doesn’t look like a blonde, white woman with shiny hair blissfully breastfeeding her baby. Cinderella isn’t the blueprint. I bet that bitch has bills to pay, too.

So why are so many moms disappointed by motherhood, when we’ve always got told that it’s the most beautiful event to ever possibly happen to a woman?

Sarah: Ever since I’m a mom, I feel like I’ve discovered the biggest scam of our society. I feel incredibly naive for buying into the belief that motherhood would be the most beautiful thing to ever happen to me.

I believe what’s the most disappointing for me is the lack of support from wider society. During my pregnancy, everyone showered me with congratulations like I’ve never experienced with any other milestone in my life, but once the baby was there it’s like society expects you to be at home and don’t bother anyone else with your screaming baby and your leaking boobs. I was shocked by how isolating it all felt.

Everyone wants to come and see the baby, but no one actually wants to help raise it, and to be fair, having people visiting the baby doesn’t help a new mom AT ALL. In contrast, it even puts another workload on us.

I also find it incredibly frustrating to witness how the life of the dad doesn’t change at all. My daughter’s dad was able to go clubbing with his friends like nothing ever happened, although our daughter was just 5 days old and I can barely get dressed.

And the worst part is we’re still told to be grateful. We’re still told that venting about motherhood is dangerous, that it makes us sound ungrateful, or worse—like we don’t love our kids. Love isn’t the issue. The issue is that the second we become mothers, the world expects us to disappear into that role and never ask for more. In fact, it’s because we love our children that we demand something better. I would even go as far as saying, better won’t cut it. We need a fucking revolution.

Briana: I never dreamed of becoming a mother, nor did I fantasize about marriage or whatever else is shoved down the throats of young girls to distract us from ourselves. So you’d think the harsh reality of modern motherhood wouldn’t be as devastating — IT IS.

First, nothing could have prepared me for the rage I’d feel for the continued and unearned praise my daughter’s father receives for simply being seen with her. It’s not specific to him; each boyfriend says the same, “people are really nice to me when it’s just the two of us.”

Meanwhile, I am offered little beyond critique, judgment, and sharp shame whenever I don’t perform motherhood perfectly. We all know “perfection” is a moving target, so it’s a lose-lose game.

I often tell people motherhood sucks, but mostly because of societal expectations, the destruction of robust community in a digital-first world, and the general intolerance of children and their parents (re: mothers) in public spaces. Women are disappointed with motherhood because it’s an unnecessarily isolating experience. Raising children is a community effort - period. The degradation of proper third places (not overly curated events rebranded as third places with a $40 entry fee) combined with the accepted norm that children should only exist in child-specific spaces, it’s simply too much work.
Especially because women do the overwhelming majority of labor associated with childcare.

Why are so many women opting for a child-free life?

Sarah: I think there are so many reasons to live a child-free life, but I guess the main dominator is that these women have simply educated themselves enough to discover the scam before having children on their own. I spoke to some women who told me they decided to never have children, after they’ve seen what their friends with children are going through. I spoke to women who told me they don’t want to have children in this economy. I spoke to women who told me they would want to have children, but the state of the world makes it impossible. I spoke to women who said that they realized having children was never a wish they had, but a societal expectation they carried. Also, I believe what plays into this today, very few women have the privilege to ‘just’ be a mother. Most of us are mothers, girl bosses, emotional caretakers and unpaid domestic workers. I think many women have come to realize that by choosing motherhood, they’re signing up for yet another unpaid full-time job — in an economy where you already need two just to survive.

What we need to understand is that the image of motherhood has been created by the media, which, in turn, has been shaped by men. Yes, the part of our society that doesn’t have a uterus, will never experience the pain of childbirth, and the social isolation that comes with it, sold us the idea that it’s the best part of our lives. And ironically, they’re also the ones benefiting from our unpaid domestic labor. They glorify sacrifice, romanticize exhaustion, and call it love when, in reality, it's often just unpaid, unrecognized labor.

Motherhood is painted as a noble duty, a woman’s highest calling, yet the systems in place do little to support mothers once they step into that role. From the moment a woman becomes a mother, she is expected to put herself last—her ambitions, her health, her identity all taking a backseat to the needs of her family. And when she dares to voice the struggles, the exhaustion, or the resentment, she’s met with guilt. Society tells her to be grateful, to cherish every moment, to smile through the sleepless nights and the endless demands because "one day she’ll miss this."

But why is it that the burden falls so disproportionately on women? Why is a father "babysitting" his own child while a mother is simply doing what’s expected? Why is childcare her responsibility, her career the one to suffer, and her body the one to bear the irreversible changes?

We are we told that motherhood is the biggest gift, but for too many women, it feels like an unnecessary trap—a role that consumes their identity, limits their freedom, and leaves them invisible in a world that heavily depends on their labor but refuses to value it.

Briana: It only takes one good video of a mother bawling her eyes out about being crushed by the endlessness of motherhood before you start to question if the risk is worth the reward. Whether it’s a result of the cost of living crisis, political instability, lack of desire, or the growing anti-child sentiment, fewer people are choosing a life alongside children, but not just of their own. As a millennial, the girl-boss era absolutely burnt us out. We were taught to collapse our existence into the endless pursuit of career success while maintaining the delusion belief that we can “have it all.” Girl-bossery left no room for living, much less dating, gestation, birth, and raising a child. We were so down bad we showed up to the club in blazers and pencil skirts, y’all!

After the collective crash of grind culture, women started caring for their mental health by going to therapy in droves. With women outpacing men educationally and emotionally, what we see today is a cultural divide between men and women as we’ve adopted different philosophies on life, in my opinion. This, of course, communicates a major privilege as distance means financial freedom outside of men. Proximity to a man also doesn’t carry the same social capital it once did. So the question becomes: why attach yourself to a man and child when parenthood has fallen out of fashion? It’s economically, socially, and emotionally challenging, what’s the point if it isn’t a burning desire?
‘The lack of support and nourishment of the mother who is holding it all.’
‘Having to do everything quickly (let me take a quick shower/ let me quickly eat etc)

’The mental load of ‘unseen’ small tasks that keep life going. Cooking, cleaning, laundry etc.’
‘The people who just don’t show up that you thought would. Especially your own mom.’
‘We were sold an idea of equality with our (male) partners, but kids show you how unequal it really is’
‘Women romanticising birth, postpartum, raising a child and therefore trapping each other.’
‘Being responsible for my daughters. I miss being reckless and doing whatever.’
‘Being trapped with a man you don’t want anymore, financial dependence’
‘The father’
‘The world’

I think what’s ironic is that growing up, I never heard a mom complain about motherhood. The only message that seemed to stick was that the love I’d feel for my daughter would somehow fix everything. I wish even one mom had sat me down to prepare me for what was coming. I wish we could all agree—as mothers—to stop romanticizing motherhood. That way, women who are unsure about having kids could make an informed decision instead of buying into decades of propaganda. And moms who feel crushed by the reality of it wouldn’t feel even worse comparing their journey to some mom on Instagram, perpetuating that same propaganda bullshit just to brand herself as the perfect mom.

I wish we would realize this: Perfect mom. Good mom. Bad mom. Hot mom. Cool mom. MILF. None of these labels trying so hard to box us in actually matter — because the benchmark was set by men. Built to make us manageable.

Palatable. Non-threatening. Easy to praise when we conform, easy to shame when we don’t. Motherhood isn’t the problem. The way motherhood has been policed, judged, and commodified through a male lens is.

And even though you’d think we’d know better by now, we all carry parts of ourselves that are still trapped in the socialization of the “good girl” who eventually gets rewarded with her perfect happy ending. Deep down, we’re still performing for approval — still trying to outperform other women to earn validation from a system that never wanted to validate us in the first place. We need to collectively unsubscribe from this shit show.

I’ll never forget when I asked moms on Instagram to privately share something they’d never say out loud, one mom said, “Sometimes I dream about being hospitalized just so I can get a break from my kids without feeling guilty.”

This is how bad it is y’all. A mother so burnt out she wants to get hospitalized should be proof enough of how ridiculously non-existent the support we receive as mothers is. We need to break the silence, stop pretending motherhood is the equivalent of a Disney movie, and start demanding real support—emotional, practical, and systemic. We won’t win this game by perpetuating a false image of motherhood just for the quick dopamine hit of being praised for our burnout. We will, however, create a different world for our daughters if we stop romanticizing the bare minimum treatment and start asking for the place in society we deserve.

That means not clapping for men who babysit their own kids. Not calling it “help” when a dad changes a diaper. Burning the idea that exhaustion is a badge of honor and replacing it with a demand for actual support. Structural change. Community care. Paid leave. Affordable childcare. Respect for mothering as labor.

Like dating a dude who wants to go 50/50 but still expects girlfriend treatment — we should be the ones covering the whole fucking bill and then leaving the table, instead of thanking him for offering to pay for his own meal. Maybe we have to be uncomfortable for some time to change the narrative, but maybe that’s the only way we can build a world where our daughters don’t have to recover from the lives they were told to dream about.

Thank you so much for reading this piece. If you want to support my work, it would mean the world to me if you donated to my fundraiser. I’m raising money to produce my own geo-docu series, where I share the raw, unfiltered stories of mothers from all around the world. It’s about damn time people finally listen.

If you want to read more from Briana, click here.
 
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They also think any child they potentially have need to have a better childhood then they had. So many people my age think they need a mansion and all the toys in the world if they have a kid.
A child will be happy being raised in a tiny apartment and playing with anything it gets its hands on.
Not that you shouldn't strive for better, but it's crazy to not have a child because you're not mega rich
Kids want love and stability.

You can be poor as fuck, as long as you stick to the schedule, keep the house clean, instill discipline in them, and love them.

One thing your house should NEVER be short of is love.
 
everyone should read these excerpts out loud before they open their mouths about birth rates and feminism

It took many of us a few messed-up relationships, abuse, and a whole lot of therapy to understand that this narrative wasn’t designed to serve us

So you’d think the harsh reality of modern motherhood wouldn’t be as devastating — IT IS

Meanwhile, I am offered little beyond critique, judgment, and sharp shame whenever I don’t perform motherhood perfectly. We all know “perfection” is a moving target, so it’s a lose-lose game

Women are disappointed with motherhood because it’s an unnecessarily isolating experience. Raising children is a community effort - period. The degradation of proper third places (not overly curated events rebranded as third places with a $40 entry fee) combined with the accepted norm that children should only exist in child-specific spaces, it’s simply too much work.
Especially because women do the overwhelming majority of labor associated with childcare.

Also, I believe what plays into this today, very few women have the privilege to ‘just’ be a mother. Most of us are mothers, girl bosses, emotional caretakers and unpaid domestic workers.

I think many women have come to realize that by choosing motherhood, they’re signing up for yet another unpaid full-time job — in an economy where you already need two just to survive

Motherhood is painted as a noble duty, a woman’s highest calling, yet the systems in place do little to support mothers once they step into that role

From the moment a woman becomes a mother, she is expected to put herself last—her ambitions, her health, her identity all taking a backseat to the needs of her family. And when she dares to voice the struggles, the exhaustion, or the resentment, she’s met with guilt. Society tells her to be grateful, to cherish every moment, to smile through the sleepless nights and the endless demands because "one day she’ll miss this."

We are we told that motherhood is the biggest gift, but for too many women, it feels like an unnecessary trap—a role that consumes their identity, limits their freedom, and leaves them invisible in a world that heavily depends on their labor but refuses to value it.

After the collective crash of grind culture, women started caring for their mental health by going to therapy in droves. With women outpacing men educationally and emotionally, what we see today is a cultural divide between men and women as we’ve adopted different philosophies on life, in my opinion.

This, of course, communicates a major privilege as distance means financial freedom outside of men. Proximity to a man also doesn’t carry the same social capital it once did. So the question becomes: why attach yourself to a man and child when parenthood has fallen out of fashion?

I wish we could all agree—as mothers—to stop romanticizing motherhood. That way, women who are unsure about having kids could make an informed decision instead of buying into decades of propaganda

I wish we would realize this: Perfect mom. Good mom. Bad mom. Hot mom. Cool mom. MILF. None of these labels trying so hard to box us in actually matter — because the benchmark was set by men. Built to make us manageable

Palatable. Non-threatening. Easy to praise when we conform, easy to shame when we don’t. Motherhood isn’t the problem. The way motherhood has been policed, judged, and commodified through a male lens is

I’ll never forget when I asked moms on Instagram to privately share something they’d never say out loud, one mom said, “Sometimes I dream about being hospitalized just so I can get a break from my kids without feeling guilty.”

This is how bad it is y’all. A mother so burnt out she wants to get hospitalized should be proof enough of how ridiculously non-existent the support we receive as mothers is

We need to break the silence, stop pretending motherhood is the equivalent of a Disney movie, and start demanding real support—emotional, practical, and systemic

Kids want love and stability.

You can be poor as fuck, as long as you stick to the schedule, keep the house clean, instill discipline in them, and love them.

One thing your house should NEVER be short of is love.
Stfu you trashpile. I grew up poor in eastern European ghetto and then went to middle class high school where the doctors ,lawyer and engineers send their kids before private schools took over.

Money makes shit less stressful in turn makes the likelihood of domestics less and parents being able to afford to see their kids daily and be mentally present when they talk to them. I grew In a commie block where families had domestics daily and when I went to visit my well off classmates they had parents who weren't exhausted working 60+ hrs per week and had energy to know them and love them.

I fucking hate faggots like you ablooo ablooo we just need love. Sorry honey " love " doesn't get you diverse diet , "love" doesn't get less stressed parents, " love" doesn't pay the bills . " love" doesn't pay for good medical treatment when your kid starts having health issues.

Fuck off . Go spend a year eating just bread , margarine, potatoes and maybe few eggs here and there thrown in for animal protein and tell me how you like it. Or better yet spend a year living with 2 adults and 2 kids crammed in 2 bedroom apartment if you are lucky and one bedroom if not lucky and tell me how you like that especially during winter.
 
Stfu you trashpile. I grew up poor in eastern European ghetto and then went to middle class high school where the doctors ,lawyer and engineers send their kids before private schools took over.
I grew up poor, I went to a fancy uni with a load of trust fund kids. That shock at a level of life I didn’t have has never left me. I knew rich people existed. I just didn’t appreciate how low down the totem pole I actually was, how much different even the middle class was, and how much of a leg up grammar school and money really is. I felt pretty bitter about it for a long time. Maybe I still do. it felt like every day was a slap in the face listening to how everyone else lived. Holidays? New clothes? Never that pit in the stomach that you might end up on the street? Crikey.
But @Jet Fuel Johnny is not wrong. I’ve also met a lot of utter wastrels from fancy backgrounds during my life.
I can’t change that I grew up poor. I don’t have those connections. I don’t have that background, I will always be a pleb. This is not changeable. So my kids will grow up with as much as I can give them but they also won’t be rich, but they will not go without the necessities, which is more than I had. I’ve met a lot of people from all sorts of backgrounds who had all sorts of outcomes, and I still hold that giving your children a decent upbringing when you’re poor sets them up psychologically for life better than being a dissolute, nanny-shagging absentee rich parent.
You do the best with what you have to hand.
 
But @Jet Fuel Johnny is not wrong. I’ve also met a lot of utter wastrels from fancy backgrounds during my life.
Let me spell it out for you since your BIG STEM BRAIN DOESNT UNDERSTAND WHAT I WROTE.

I AM TALKING ABOUT AVERAGEs . You are comparing the top 10% of piss poor parents with the bottom 10% of well off parents. IF you love your kids you should at least be at level where you dont have to worry paying bills and able to afford some meat in your diet , proper butter for sandwiches and decent change of clothes without working 60 hours per day and actually being physically able to spend time with your kids without passing out on the couch like my parents did.

Just because you sufffered doesn;t mean other should also I find it ironic that you refused to have kids untill you saved up even though you preach about having kids in poverty .

I know lots of faggots will show up HURR DURR MAKE DO , faggot spend a year in cramped appartment with nutrients lacking in your food like vitamin c ( I had nosebleeds 6 months per year thanks to that ) vitaming b or iron while working 12 hrs per day shift and come back to noisy crammed appartment . You will be pulling that slipper and spoon faster than abuela and miss your kids depelopment and lives because you are too exausted working and worrying about bills . Few VERY FEW people manage this shit mostly families living in rural areas because they get nutrients and space that dissipates some of the stress .
 
I grew up poor, I went to a fancy uni with a load of trust fund kids. That shock at a level of life I didn’t have has never left me. I knew rich people existed. I just didn’t appreciate how low down the totem pole I actually was, how much different even the middle class was, and how much of a leg up grammar school and money really is. I felt pretty bitter about it for a long time. Maybe I still do. it felt like every day was a slap in the face listening to how everyone else lived. Holidays? New clothes? Never that pit in the stomach that you might end up on the street? Crikey.
But @Jet Fuel Johnny is not wrong. I’ve also met a lot of utter wastrels from fancy backgrounds during my life.
I can’t change that I grew up poor. I don’t have those connections. I don’t have that background, I will always be a pleb. This is not changeable. So my kids will grow up with as much as I can give them but they also won’t be rich, but they will not go without the necessities, which is more than I had. I’ve met a lot of people from all sorts of backgrounds who had all sorts of outcomes, and I still hold that giving your children a decent upbringing when you’re poor sets them up psychologically for life better than being a dissolute, nanny-shagging absentee rich parent.
You do the best with what you have to hand.
Doing your best is all you can do, and it's sad some think money/wealth is superior to having a loving family. I, too met many at uni who came from the kind of wealth that's hard for many to comprehend but most had abysmal relationships with their parents, and family. Parents need to provide a stable and nurturing environment that encourages emotional growth and well-being and having loving parents who offer unconditional love and support are essential for a child's development. Wealth alone cannot replace the emotional connection and security that comes from love. A child who is loved will grow up to be confident and resilient, and is much more likely to be a happy person that other children want to be friends with, regardless of their parent's financial circumstances.
 
Actually a fascinating article and the knee jerk conservative reactions to much of it is exactly why the western dialectic is so poisoned.

These women correctly identify many of the problems in the medical INDUSTRY, the persistent infantilization of men, the degradation of family structures, lack of "third spaces," women forced into the work force (different than the historical norm localized/home labor force ), largely the results of the neoliberalization of humans through the 20th century, instrumentalized and quantified, etc etc, and then the closing conclusion is blame men (men defined the label "cool mom?") men ( the dastardly media that convinced women completing their primary biological purpose in life is a significant and emotionally rewarding event? ), the "system" and their demand to resolve it... Payment for emotional and domestic labor. PTO? not an end to consumer capitalism? A return to traditional gender roles? A willingness to accept a more modest but more mentally free lifestyle, outside the rat race? An expectation for "better" men (not just 666 but capable and confident) and themselves being the stable and competent partners those men attract?

Fascinating how theoretically anti capitalists (in presentation not in actual practice) have deeply internalized a profit motive and financialized the simple acts of existing (cleaning your home, supporting your family and friends, caring for your children)... Emotional and domestic labor. The rot of consumer capitalism runs very, very deep.

Lastly, not a novel point, but they themselves acknowledge implicitly women are more entrenched in the system than ever yet motherhood becomes ever more impossible and undesirable despite their increasing access to the reins of power.

Anyway these bitches suck and are gay but just dismissing the sentiment out of hand only drives the wedge further. They've identified real problems and to some extent real feelings or real reactions to those problems (some of it is entitled, some I think quite genuine or substantive). These women, or maybe not these lame chicks but women more broadly, need a sympathetic and compassionate hand to navigate the toxic state of social media, "feminism," and capitalist culture that hollows out their wombs and many of their souls in the process.
 
They've identified real problems
It’s a matter of great surprise to me to see how these people, who used to be so against big corporations raping the planet and enslaving all have been so thoroughly trained to suck corporate and government (as long as it’s the right side!) cock.
Yes like you say they can see the problems, but they refrain from taking that final step and really seeing WHY we have these problems and HOW it could be better because to do so would mean getting that corporate cock out of their mouth.
Was it so simple as sponsoring pride parades? How did the left get so completely cucked into loving their corporate and government overlords to the point they will defend them even as they make us first serfs, and then extinct? And attack anyone who says they might not be benign? It’s incredible, a master stroke of social engineering.
 
No one wants to have children? That basic biological impulse found in every animal is just gone? Interesting.
Women still want to have kids. They feel the impulses. But they talk each through the mindless, meaningless feelings that are the baby rabies, and after that experience they're all in on the idea that having kids will make you miserable... because what else are they going to do? Accept that they fucked up, that their lives will be a little more hollow because they listened to their cunt "friends?" They won't admit that.
 
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It’s a matter of great surprise to me to see how these people, who used to be so against big corporations raping the planet and enslaving all have been so thoroughly trained to suck corporate and government (as long as it’s the right side!) cock.
Yes like you say they can see the problems, but they refrain from taking that final step and really seeing WHY we have these problems and HOW it could be better because to do so would mean getting that corporate cock out of their mouth.
Was it so simple as sponsoring pride parades? How did the left get so completely cucked into loving their corporate and government overlords to the point they will defend them even as they make us first serfs, and then extinct? And attack anyone who says they might not be benign? It’s incredible, a master stroke of social engineering.
Yeah it's a great question/statement. It's so rich because it encompasses so many different threads and causes. To some extent leftists, like all people really (myself included to some extent), have always failed to live up to their ideals, plus times change, but there seems to have been a deliberate top down push away from anti-globalism and anti-capitalism into identity politics, which hollowed out the intellectual or moral core underlying a lot of the leftist anti capitalist arguments. Social media, an increasing lack of solidarity among workers, death of labor movements, black vernacular as authenticity (black materialism/money worship, fuck you pay me), identity politics, lives increasingly oriented around convenience, generally people becoming dumber....

As I love reminding all the Trumptards in the US Politics thread (keep giving me your neg rating because you have no substantive response faggots), capitalism is open borders. In both cases, left and right, they are serving the contrived needs of global finance capital within the language/framework of radical political speech.
 
I have no problems with couples who hit their 30s, realise they're not willing to give up their current lifestyle, and decide not to have kids.

I have no problem with couples who get clubbing, hobbies, and travel out of their system before having kids. They tend not to feel like they've "missed out" when they finally do have kids.

I do have a problem with couples who think that nothing should change when they have kids and that their current lifestyle will just continue with the kids fitting around it. The moment your child is born, it stops being all about you. Ideally, you understand that even before they are born.

There's no conspiracy of silence around the fact that parenthood is hard. If you're not hearing about sleepless nights, sick kids, tantrums, every changing food and activity preferences, along with every milestone, then where the hell are you getting your information about parenthood from - because it's sure as hell not from normal parents.

The observation that people often have less extended family support available these days is a valid one, though. Even if you have extended family living locally, there's a good chance that grandparents, aunties and uncles are all working and less available to help out than they might have been in previous generations.
The extended family is boomers and boomers have about as much time for their grandkids as they had for their kids.

The older my kid gets the less I comprehend about my boomer parents actions.
 
It's hard to listen to her even when she's sort of making good points because she is someone who chose to fuck around and travel all the time with a kid in tow. It's kind of hard to take complaints about lack of community seriously in light of that. It's also hard to take those complaints seriously because her political/ideological class has been the ones most in favor of destroying all the things that made family life achievable.
 
It’s a matter of great surprise to me to see how these people, who used to be so against big corporations raping the planet and enslaving all have been so thoroughly trained to suck corporate and government (as long as it’s the right side!) cock.
Yes like you say they can see the problems, but they refrain from taking that final step and really seeing WHY we have these problems and HOW it could be better because to do so would mean getting that corporate cock out of their mouth.
Was it so simple as sponsoring pride parades? How did the left get so completely cucked into loving their corporate and government overlords to the point they will defend them even as they make us first serfs, and then extinct? And attack anyone who says they might not be benign? It’s incredible, a master stroke of social engineering.
Hollywood

Most Dems are mass consumers or have completely wrapped themselves around fiction. From there, it is easy to sell corporate and party bootlicking through basic appeals to Star Wars or whatever. It is a little concerning how many people take their political viewpoints from Marvel comics, Star Wars, South Park, Saturday Night Live, or the king of liberalism, the Daily Show. Even worse is hearing about media literacy or that taking politics from a comedian is smart as some scientist said it is good.

The Dems have so many other exploitable appeals: The need to be a savior to the world, the mass appeals to science and academia, ego, etc.. I have come to the conclusion that many just want to get their Daily Show style smug post to epically OWN the right and couldn't care less past that.
 
Yes. House prices are so high you need two incomes. Professional jobs require you 24/7. That means you need two parents working. My parents managed a small house and a small car on one income. We can’t.
Theres a few reasons why housing is unaffordable and probably will remain so until the dollar hyperinflates away resetting the mechanism.
1.) Peoples standards are too high. Everyone feels entitled to an upper middle class lifestyle on a working class budget and they make it happen with obscene amounts of debt, leading to:
2.) Modern homes are much larger than their boomer era counterparts. The typical 50s home was a 2 bedroom 1 bathroom 800 square foot shack with no garage
3.) Mortgages were effectively interest free after 2008. This allowed people to pay more for housing than they should have been able to so all that weve built since then was overpriced $300k and up "luxury" housing while neglecting to build small starter homes and condos. This led to housing prices skyrocketing, coincidentally Americas fertility rate plummeted below replacement after 2008.
4.) Oppressive zoning laws and red tape make it impossible to build new houses. This is why southern states have the most affordable real estate and the lowest homelessness rates in the country, we take pride in our lack of building restrictions.
5.) Too many people(boomers) benefit from the suffering of non homeowners so no solution will ever be implemented.

As I mentioned the death of the dollar may help with this. In 1960, before fiat money, a house cost $11k on average or 44,000 silver quarters. A silver quarter has a melt value of about 5 bucks which translates to $220,000 today. If you compare apples to apples that is exactly the same as what it would cost to buy the same size house today in a normal state. Houses arent more expensive, our money is worth less.
 
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