The truth is, it really wasn't the feminists who pushed women into the workforce. It was economics. But the greater truth is, women have always worked -- except for that brief period after WWII until the early 1970s. During WWII they worked in factories and before that a large portion of them lived in rural environments where they were busy working either feeding something or killing something.
**But the greater truth is, women have always worked -- except for that brief period after WWII until the early 1970s. During WWII they worked in factories and before that a large portion of them lived in rural environments where they were busy working either feeding something or killing something.**
And women continue to work whether in the workforce or the family/community. And I don't agree that it was economics that gives so many women no choice in raising their kids for the need of two incomes. I think it is the heavy tax burden and reverse discrimination femenazis imposed on society. There are not more women in colleges than men by accident.