Quote: (07-29-2014 12:37 PM)Samseau Wrote:
Exactly Scorpian. I don't think any guy here should judge her. At least she is having kids. I value the single-mom's more than the spinster career bitches.
^ Fuck that. The question to ask is what is the
quality of the child she's breeding, and who really pays for her luxury to decide she can't be bothered with a husband?
Single mothers raise rotten, fucked-up children, especially as they won't discipline them in case they lose peer approval, rather than being their child's parent. Every decent kid I've ever known has a strong father figure, ever fucked up slut and violent thug I've known has a strong, empowered single mother.
My mate's 13-year-old son says "Please" and "Thank you" and helps with the washing up.
His neighbour's 12-year-old son stands on the fence and pisses on our parked cars, and gleefully tells his mommy's new 'provider' that "you can't take your car back from her because she got you to put her name on the paperwork."
Another mate's son works hard in school, is always friendly, mow's the lawn without being asked and plays in the school football team.
Their neighbour's son? He's a 10-year-old obese video game addict who rarely sees the sun, tells his mother to 'fuck off' to her face, and often still sleeps in her bed at night.
Can you guess which children have 'strong, empowered single mothers' raising them?
It's the pattern I see over and over again. I believe the current dating market is like it is because of the lack of men raising their children.
The typist is a moron, and looks like a 29-year-old hitting the wall pretending she's 21 with soft-focus lighting and makeup.
EDIT:
One of many studies measuring both physical and mental health of children:
http://content.healthaffairs.org/content/26/2/549.full
Quote:Quote:
Children in step, single-mother, or grandparent-only families had poorer health than children living with two biological parents. Adjusting for demographic differences reduced observed disparities, although children living in single-mother or grandparent-only families still had poorer health than children living with two biological parents. Adjusted estimates showed that children in single-father families generally did as well as (for mental health) or better than (for physical health) children living with two biological parents.
There's also research that suggests that single mothers are the most at risk of mental health issues, (16% vs 6% married women).
Women (especially authors and social workers) will deny this and do everything they can to obscure the facts, but they hold true.