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<title>The Real Mommy Wars</title>
<link>http://www.reason.com/news/show/36870.html</link>
<description> &lt;p&gt;&lt;em&gt;&lt;a href=&quot;http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0316736872/reasonmagazineA/&quot;&gt;To Hell With All That: Loving and Loathing Our
Inner Housewife&lt;/A&gt;, by Caitlin Flanagan, New York: Little, Brown, 272 pages,
$22.95&lt;br&gt;
&lt;br&gt;
&lt;a href=&quot;http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/1596980036/reasonmagazineA/&quot;&gt;The Politically Incorrect Guide to Women, Sex, and Feminism&lt;/A&gt;, by Carrie Lukas,
Washington, D.C.: Regnery Publishing, 221 pages, $19.95&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/p&gt;


&lt;p&gt;In
an alarming
sin of omission, pollsters have yet to tell us anything definitive about the
so-called Mommy Wars, that half-imagined battle between the working mothers of
overscheduled upper-middle-class children and the stay-at-home mothers of
overscheduled upper-middle-class children. Every op-ed scold therefore is free
to speculate about what women outside the commentariat really think of this
fight they may not know they're fighting.&lt;/p&gt;



&lt;p&gt;Women who enjoy the
luxury of choosing between full-time motherhood and full-time office work seem
perfectly capable of filling their spare hours with round-the-clock ballet-
class shuttles and yoga for toddlers. For those without the choice or the children,
both the question and the verbiage it has spawned are comically irrelevant.&lt;/p&gt;



&lt;p&gt;But like many battles
fought on distant shores, this one resonates in the homeland. Thus was &lt;i&gt;To
Hell With All That&lt;/i&gt;, Caitlin Flanagan's slender collection of reworked &lt;i&gt;Atlantic&lt;/i&gt;
and &lt;i&gt;New Yorker&lt;/i&gt; essays, greeted with a review in nearly every major media
outlet still reviewing books—most of which furiously denounced the volume. It
is unclear how much this reaction has to do with Flanagan's tepid
back-of-the-book endorsement of stay-at-home mothering. &lt;i&gt;The San Francisco
Chronicle&lt;/i&gt; took the opportunity to remind us that the Equal Rights Amendment
failed to pass. At least three newspapers heaped catty scorn on Flanagan's
admission that she and her husband have never changed their own sheets—an
attractive proposition, to be sure, but hardly a pivotal moment in the essay
that contains it.&lt;/p&gt;

&lt;p&gt;The real pivot of that essay is Martha
Stewart, &quot;stuff of a thousand jokes and parodies,&quot; whom Flanagan sees as an
emblem of a uniquely female longing for waxed floors, pressed sheets, and
windowsills without those telltale paint flecks of neglect. Here Flanagan slips
in a typically well-expressed critique of all the Betty Freidanesque obsession
with gender roles: &quot;If you want to make a feminist sputter with rage, remind
her of those dark days in America's past when girls took home ec classes and
boys took shop. But to watch yuppie parents squirm with dread and confusion
when anything in their households goes on the fritz is to wonder whether it was
such a bad thing for one half of the marriageable population to know how to
mend a fallen hem and the other half to have rudimentary knowledge of the
workings of a fuse box.&quot;&lt;/p&gt;



&lt;p&gt;That's a typical
Flanagan sentiment, as well as a typical Flanagan construction: quiet observation,
couched in homey common sense, rolled together in a spit wad aimed at the
feminist theory of housework that has dominated the movement since the
inaugural days of Ms. More often than not, the spit wad contains a fair measure
of nostalgia for the days when women still possessed a Martha-like knowledge of
the curious process, somehow involving sashes, of airing a room. (I remain
unconvinced that this requires anything but opening windows on opposite walls.)&lt;/p&gt;



&lt;p&gt;Flanagan's attitude
toward household chores and the way her imagined upper-middle-class audience
customarily deals with them is pure white guilt. Although she claims she's &quot;not
someone who is troubled, for political or personal reasons, by the idea of
hiring people to work in my household,&quot; she writes obsessively, here and
elsewhere, about the &quot;achievements of the women's movement…bought at the
expense of poor women, often of poor brown-skinned women.&quot; The first of
Flanagan's pieces for &lt;i&gt;The Atlantic&lt;/i&gt; to earn national attention bemoaned
this &quot;exploitation&quot; with the fervency of a woman who had just realized that her
under-the-table relationship with her nanny's paycheck was cheating the woman
out of Social Security credits, thus implicating Flanagan &quot;in the murderous
process by which human cargo is transported into this country to ease the lives
of the middle class.&quot;&lt;/p&gt;


&lt;p&gt;It's
this sort of confessional—more insider corporate whistleblower than Benedict
Arnold—that I suspect earned Flanagan the disdain of her peers, the media
mothers who stoked the fires of the mommy wars in the first place. It might
surprise anyone who hadn't heard of Flanagan before the flap about this book
that she's a self-identified political liberal who mentions the eminently
sensible idea of making a private provision for her nanny and then dismisses it
on the grounds that her knee jerks in favor of the current Social Security
system's set-aside.&lt;/p&gt;



&lt;p&gt;Expressed in Flanagan's
usually smart, literate prose are several banal canards. Hiring help—even the
brown-skinned Third World kind, who arguably need the work most—isn't
exploitation, unless all work is a form of exploitation. Flanagan displays that
regrettable leftist tendency to confuse low-skill labor with slavery, although
it's unlikely that she thinks of herself as exploited by &lt;i&gt;The New Yorker&lt;/i&gt;'s
editorial board. The thought that someone might enjoy child care—or even the
weaker point that nanny work is apparently better than the available
alternatives—never surfaces.&lt;/p&gt;



&lt;p&gt;A subtler problem,
dwelling just beneath the surface, is that, for all of Flanagan's calculated
and apparently sensible desire that women learn to do their own housework,
there's no real reason why they should. Dishwashers have replaced drying racks
in the houses of the middle class, but you never hear a word in defense of those
particular old ways. But replace &quot;technology&quot; with &quot;inexpensive labor,&quot; and
suddenly June Cleaver's hour has arrived.&lt;/p&gt;



&lt;p&gt;Flanagan may bemoan
her inability to sew a button on a shirt, but surely the answer to that age-old
problem is to learn how to do it, not to berate those of us who would rather
take our shirts to a full-service dry cleaner/tailor, saving ourselves the
costs of time and, in my case, holes in my fingers that virtually shout &quot;lack
of comparative advantage.&quot; A September 2005 &lt;i&gt;Cambridge Journal of Economics&lt;/i&gt;
essay by Steven Horwitz, which lays out a Hayekian defense of the family,
posits that the more time saved by outsourcing and labor-saving devices, the
more time parents can spend &quot;being involved with their children in
extracurricular activities such as sports or the arts.&quot; The brand of
&quot;round-the-clock worry&quot; motherhood that Flanagan says she's chosen to pursue is
helped, not hindered, by increased specialization of labor.&lt;/p&gt;



&lt;p&gt;Flanagan never lays out
an argument for full-time mothering that would persuade those not already
convinced, but she implies that, like painting windowsills, child-rearing is
best left to the lady of the house. Here's where a new leftist critique of
capitalism—that markets aren't particularly accommodating to families and the
gentler civil institutions—makes sense. &lt;/p&gt;



&lt;p&gt;This leftist critique
surfaces in &lt;i&gt;To Hell With All That&lt;/i&gt;, with all of Flanagan's talk of brown
women facilitating their white sisters' rise in the world. It's better
expressed by Flanagan's successor on the family beat at &lt;i&gt;The Atlantic&lt;/i&gt;,
Sandra Tsing Loh. Loh writes in a review of Arlie Russell Hochschild's &lt;i&gt;The
Commercialization of Intimate Life&lt;/i&gt; that the &quot;commercial&quot; solutions to
parental absence are often better than the real deal. Third World nannies are &quot;more
relaxed, patient, and joyful&quot; with their charges, because they are relaxed,
patient, and joyful by skill and profession, not biology. Loh predictably finds
this &quot;creepy,&quot; but she is on solid argumentative ground when she wonders why
more conservatives don't share her reaction: &quot;In a capitalist society work
dictates the schedules, the deadlines, the urgency; product life cycles
supersede family life cycles at every turn. (The capitalism so beloved of
'family values' conservatives—the same capitalism that is so friendly to
radical individualism —is by its very nature inimical to the nuclear family.)&quot;&lt;/p&gt;



&lt;p&gt;Can standard
conservative theory reconcile opposing visions of women as capitalism's &quot;latest
recruits&quot; and as the better halves—quarters, eighths?—of a happy nuclear
family? If &lt;i&gt;The Politically Incorrect Guide to Women, Sex, and Feminism&lt;/i&gt;
is any indicator of mainstream right-wing thought on the subject, conservatives
arrive at the same answer as Flanagan—that stay-at-home motherhood is the best
kind—from a different direction.&lt;/p&gt;


&lt;p&gt;Author
Carrie L. Lukas, vice president of policy at the Independent Women's
Forum,presents plenty of standard—and correct—answers to the various
conceits of women studies' departments in the opening chapters of her book. She
swiftly disposes, for example, of the complaint that women typically receive a
fraction of men's pay for the same work. The usual statistics are all here: If
you account for the facts that women spend a half an hour less in the office
than men every day, and 10 years less in the workforce over the course of a
lifetime, the wage disparity effectively disappears. But these statistics
deserve repeating, if only because the rallying cry &quot;75 cents on the dollar!&quot;
seems to retain its great rhetorical power. (John Kerry used it in a debate
back in 2004.) She also refutes the oft-cited statistic that one in four women
is a victim of sexual assault, and concludes that marriage, far from the
&quot;hitting license&quot; of women's studies textbooks, is actually rather safe.
Married women are less likely than divorced, separated, or cohabiting women to
be victims of domestic abuse.&lt;/p&gt;



&lt;p&gt;But by chapter 11, &quot;Work
in the Real World,&quot;the clucking has begun in earnest. In a section
entitled &quot;The feminist working girl fantasy,&quot; Lukas, by way of &lt;i&gt;Friends &lt;/i&gt;and
a host of other pop culture references,points out that the lives of
Rachel Green, fashion designer, and Average Johanna, career girl, are very
different. According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, Johanna has a roughly 6
percent chance of becoming a secretary. Lawyering and doctoring &quot;don't make the
list&quot; of the 20 most common professions for women, a fact that causes Lukas to
sniff that &quot;this list of occupations stands in stark contrast to the depiction
of working women commonly found on television and in women's magazines&quot; and
remind us once again that Young People Can't Tell the Difference Between
Television and Reality.&lt;/p&gt;



&lt;p&gt;It's an appalling
condescension, worthy of the paid-work-as-exploitation crowd. It fails to
acknowledge, for one thing, that men's top jobs aren't any more conventionally
glamorous. (The top profession is truck driving.)The thought that women
might find satisfaction in work that Lukas considers beneath consideration is
just as unlikely to occur to her as it is to occur to Caitlin Flanagan. Lukas
cites an Independent Women's Forum/Pew poll to the effect that only 15 percent
of women would work full-time, if they had their druthers,and an
additional third would opt for part-time. Which all sounds fine—until you
realize that the question was prefaced by the important qualifier, &quot;if you had
enough money to live as comfortably as you would like.&quot; A third of truck
drivers—and lawyers and surgeons—would also doubtless prefer part-time work to
full-time work, and no work at all to part-time work, if financial conditions
created a new Eden. &lt;/p&gt;


&lt;p&gt;It's then that Lukas begins to sound like
&lt;i&gt;The Simpsons'&lt;/i&gt; Helen Lovejoy, prone to shouting, &quot;What about the
children? Won't someone please think of the children?&quot; Did you know that some
children return to empty houses? Or that those who attend day care programs get
nits and scabies? (Forget first grade, in that case.) After this hand wringing,
Lukas admits, &quot;No researcher I'm familiar with says that daycare will cause
serious problems for most children.&quot; The ambiguous wording proceeds from the
ambiguity of the consensus. Within the single outfit that has studied the
question in the greatest detail (the National Institute of Child Health and
Human Development), researchers believe that children in day care have better
verbal skills at 54 months but that their mothers have less of that
biologically useful maternal attachment. The differences in health between day
care kids and children at home were statistically insignificant by age 3. Lukas
strips away the nuance, covers her tracks with a few grudging caveats, and
still manages to create the impression that those feminists have been hiding
something all along.&lt;/p&gt;



&lt;p&gt;And that's how you
create a conservative narrative these days. Take a set of assertions,call
it a majority opinion,and proceed to show how only establishment types
could possibly believe it in the face of overwhelming evidence to the contrary.
Because of this formulaic approach to intellectual engagement, the format of an
Idiot's Guide works well for the &lt;i&gt;Politically Incorrect Guide&lt;/i&gt; series.
Creative typography summarizes the content of each chapter in three quick
&quot;Guess what?&quot; facts challenging the accepted wisdom.&lt;/p&gt;



&lt;p&gt;The
&quot;Fertility Facts&quot; chapter is a good example of how such disconnected observations
obscure the complexity of the questions they purport to answer. Lukas correctly
argues that &quot;many women have been led to believe that they can postpone
childbearing without consequence&quot; but seems oblivious to the possibility that
there might be good reasons for women to accept the risk of decreased
fertility. One is better technology that can bring forth babies from what a
generation or two ago would have been barren ground. Others are increased
wealth and, yes, that much-maligned opportunity to pursue paid work. Although
sorting cause from effect is tricky when it comes to poverty and motherhood, a
2004 Kennedy School of Government analysis of Britain's Millennium Cohort data
suggests early motherhood may compound the already poor prospects of low-income
women who give birth at an early age—which is by no means proof that such woman
should have made different choices.&lt;/p&gt;



&lt;p&gt;Although they start at
different points, the Flanagans and Lukases, leftist and rightist critics of
women's choices, arrive at the same place for the same reason: a refusal to see
women as autonomous beings, capable of weighing alternatives and arriving at
conclusions based on information about individual circumstances that the
commanders of the Mommy Wars simply can't possess, no matter how many polls
they conduct. Whether the particular narrative about motherhood has women
conscripted into service by capitalism or feminism, what's missing is a
cool-headed free market analysis, which would regard women as actors in an
arena of choices, without the conceit of top-down management.&lt;/p&gt;



&lt;p&gt;Horwitz's aforementioned
&lt;i&gt;Cambridge Journal of Economics&lt;/i&gt; paper goes a long way toward providing
this analysis. Recognizing that children and work are competing values, and
that sociological evidence suggests one can outsource everything but parental
love, he concludes, &quot;The decision as to which person(s) will work in the market
and which will (or will not) work at home can be understood, again, in terms of
preferences and opportunity costs.&quot; This description lacks that old comfortable
strain of oppressor and oppressed. But as moral prescriptions go, &quot;mind your
own business&quot; is as cogent as any. &lt;/p&gt;</description>
<guid isPermaLink="false">36870@http://www.reason.com</guid>
<pubDate>Sun, 01 Oct 2006 08:53:00 EDT</pubDate><author>info@reason.com (Shannon Chamberlain)</author>
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