- 24 May 2024 04:15
#15316279
Many people are angry at Harrison Butker for telling women that they should be looking forward to bearing and raising children.
I think we should bear in mind that being a homemaker is a religious tradition that is practiced as part of a certain culture, that being, the culture of Judeo-Christianity.
Some of us might not feel comfortable embracing such a tradition, and that's fine. But we have no right to try to impose our desire not to be homemakers onto another group that wishes to do so.
Every culture is different. In this particular culture, being a homemaker is an incredibly important and honorable vocation for a woman. If we are to ask for tolerance and respect for our particular cultural norms, then I think we should also be tolerant of their cultural norms. Being a homemaker is a cultural norm, and Harrison Butker is not necessarily wrong for advocating that this practice continues. It is after all a conservative traditional value and norm.
Many people are angry at Harrison Butker for telling women that they should be looking forward to bearing and raising children.
I think we should bear in mind that being a homemaker is a religious tradition that is practiced as part of a certain culture, that being, the culture of Judeo-Christianity.
Some of us might not feel comfortable embracing such a tradition, and that's fine. But we have no right to try to impose our desire not to be homemakers onto another group that wishes to do so.
Every culture is different. In this particular culture, being a homemaker is an incredibly important and honorable vocation for a woman. If we are to ask for tolerance and respect for our particular cultural norms, then I think we should also be tolerant of their cultural norms. Being a homemaker is a cultural norm, and Harrison Butker is not necessarily wrong for advocating that this practice continues. It is after all a conservative traditional value and norm.