hadespussercats wrote:Regarding this:
coito wrote:No, a stay at home parent is not a slave, because the stay at home parent doesn't have to do anything they don't want to do. They also are not required to have children in the first place, or get married. If they are married, it is certainly LAWFUL to have one working spouse pay the other spouse $10 an hour (or whatever) for vacuuming, going to the grocery store, cleaning the bathrooms and kitchen, and taking care of a child (if any), but should it be legally required that a stay at home spouse be paid for "their time?" Of course not.
If a stay at home dad gets "paid for his time" cleaning up and wiping asses, then the "working mom" who comes home and puts in 4 hours in the evening of the same home-tasks ought to be paid for hers, too, yes?
In the hypothetical example I posited, you and your wife decide between you that you should stay home and care for your high-needs twins until they're in school.
No one forced you to have twins, that's beside the point, and for the purposes of this discussion, Coito, I'd like you to stop bringing it up.
I've also asked you to tell me what happens if the spouse who is being paid for their time is a slacker, or performs deficiently on the job. Also, are you saying that she pays me, or that the government pays me? Please clarify explicitly.
Who chooses to have children is very much relevant to the discussion though. I do not concede that it is "beside the point." It's like someone saying that they bought a big house, so now they need help paying the property taxes and mowing the lawn. You bought a big house? Enjoy it, but you have to deal with it. Same with children and a home-life. If you're asking the taxpayer to fund someone cleaning up their house, then we all ought to get a stipend, not just "stay at home parents." And, if it's only child care that you're talking about paying people for their time, then it's like the house -- you're the one who bought it/conceived it -- it's your job to pay for it.
hadespussercats wrote:
If you didn't have young children, you wouldn't have decided to stay home with them. So comparing this situation to you just... staying at home doesn't wash.
It does wash, because the same could be said for folks that keep pumping out kids -- maybe we have 5 kids. So, now it's not my responsibility?
hadespussercats wrote:
You're on duty.
I need a definition here. There is no such thing as "on duty" and "off duty" when people are parents. You're always on duty, even when at work, the way I see it. When a call comes to work that the kid is sick at school or day care, you're on call.
So, explain what you mean by on duty -- when do I go on duty, and what are my general duties? Who is doing the duties when I'm off duty?
hadespussercats wrote:
When your wife comes home, it's not like you suddenly hand over all childcare responsibilities, housecleaning responsibilities, whatever.
Are you saying this as a general proposition? I know people who come home from work and literally ARE handed the child over and told that it's their turn. This is an issue between parents. So, you'll have to clarify if you're saying that for the purposes of the hypothetical, this is what my wife and I agreed, or if it's something you are saying is generally applicable.
hadespussercats wrote:
But, you could. You could decide between you that that's when you get a break, go out for your poker game, whatever. It doesn't really matter-- you're both home. Her workday is through, and your workday of being the sole caretaker of the twins is through.
Maybe y'all cook dinner together. Wash dishes, give the kids a bath, all the stuff you might have done (or tried to get done) when you were alone with the kids during the day.
See? You both have workdays, you both have things you take care of around the house or with your family when the workday's through. The main difference is that your off-hours at home look a lot more like your working hours than your wife's do.
That is only if the non-working-house home tasks are split evenly, which is only one way to do it. If you're saying that we've chosen to do it that way for the purposes of the hypothetical, fine, but it is assuming quite a lot, like how demanding my wife's at work career is -- perhaps she comes home drained and stressed out and busts her ovaries at work all day to bring home a good living, and that level of stress and work far exceeds my home routine with the twins. So, there are plenty of factors that could enter into it.
But, I'll assume we've agreed that her work day and my stay at home day are about equal. So, she comes home and we both do stuff around the house after work. Good. So, what does that mean to you? That she should pay me a wage? Why? I don't pay her for her work. She gets a salary from her employer, not me.
hadespussercats wrote:
Shouldn't at least some of the money your wife brings home be earmarked specifically as yours?
Nope. Because the money my wife brings home is not "earmarked specifically as HERS" either. 100% of it is ours, not just some of it earmarked. Two people are free to do what they please, though, and if they choose to have separate funds, then fine. Might make sense where you want spending money and to make it easier to spend money without having to disclose every little thing to each other, you each have some money in separate checking accounts for day to day stuff. Sounds reasonable. But, that's different that creating a wage to the stay at home spouse for "his time."
hadespussercats wrote:
After all, you're doing a task the two of you agreed together you should do. And you're doing work you'd have to pay someone else a fair amount to do if you weren't doing it. (I'm sure every place is different, but in my neighborhood you'd be lucky to find in-home care for twins, plus some cleaning/laundry/whathaveyou, for less than $20/hour.)
So? Again, why should MY WIFE pay me for that? if WE are hiring someone to that then WE would be paying that someone. It wouldn't be just my wife hiring that person. And, likewise, if she has to pay me for my job, then why wouldn't I have to pay her for hers? I don't help her with her tasks at the office, so, for there to be a requirement some of the wages for her day job be shared with me for my day job, well, now she's not getting a full wage for her job, is she? Shouldn't I then kick in to my wife's wages, thereby making it a wash?
hadespussercats wrote:
And this is in part what I was getting at earlier with my questions about traditional marriage as an economic unit. Traditionally, the bread-winning spouse provides for the stay-at-home spouse (generally a woman, even today, because of breastfeeding) because the stay-at-home spouse is providing valuable work, from sex to childcare to cooking to procurement of supplies to making/mending clothing to laundry to cleaning. Ina time when women couldn't own property themselves, generally, marriage was a way of getting paid. A career. (Which is what I was referencing with my flip comment about Ann Romney getting paid-- Mormons are pretty damn traditional when it comes to marriage roles-- apart from the whole polygamy thing.)
The issues were different when married women were disabled from entering into their own contracts and owning any property. But, even then, there was no wage paid. Theoretically, the money was "theirs" but in reality it was all his, and the woman too was pretty much his. So, the whole situation was messed up from our modern perspective. Today, however, the concept is two people voluntarily joined and both are of equal dignity. All the assets of the marriage are both of theirs, not just one. Neither is the employee of the other.
That's another factor you haven't addressed that I've brought up. My wage-paying wife comes home and she's not happy with my job performance. What is her recourse? Dock my wages? Reduction in pay? Maybe a good daycare person can't be found for under $20 an hour, but maybe I'm a sloth and a layabout.
hadespussercats wrote:
I need to look back at an earlier comment you made about the credit card issue-- something about someone frittering away a spouse's earnings with irresponsible credit card use. I found it telling.
You'll have to link to it, because I think you're not accurately recounting what I wrote.
hadespussercats wrote:
Particularly since you've made such a point that married people share their money.
I made no such point. There is a distinction between the marital assets being legally the assets of both of the spouses and the actual power dynamic that happens from one marriage to another. They may or may not "share" with each other. One spouse may be meek and let the other one handle all the money, and they may open accounts only in one name, who knows?
hadespussercats wrote:
Someone who has no control over money-- whether to claim it as an asset or to determine how it should be spent, is not an equal sharer in that money. At best, he or she is being treated like a child with a parent who holds the pursestrings.
Both spouses have the same legal right to claim marital assets as their assets, and determine how money should be spent. The CARD Act dealt with income only - and one spouse who doesn't have a job can't get a card ONLY IN HIS NAME based on the representation that the other spouse makes a ton of money, UNLESS THE OTHER SPOUSE ALSO SIGNS TO BE LIABLE. See? It's a way to guard against a spouse getting a line of credit without the credit card company being able to pursue the income on which the credit line was based.
What your "employee" concept creates is a situation of "master-servant" where the wage earning spouse is the master, and the stay at home spouse is the servant. That is far worse than the idea that they both are legally entitled to dispose of marital assets. Plus, your idea has more problems with it than that. How about child support? So, the working spouse pays all the bills? Or, now that the working spouse is paying the stay at home spouse a salary, does the stay at home spouse now have to kick in 50-50 for the bills? Or, will the salary my wife has to pay me reduced to take that into account? And, since my wife pays me a salary, does that mean that whatever she doesn't pay me is now hers, and hers alone? I no longer have the rights of a spouse?
hadespussercats wrote:
Someone who owns their money can fritter it away or not, as they choose. And whether they choose so or not should be between the person and the person's spouse-- not the business issuing the credit.
And, that is the way it is. But, you seem to be missing the part that the credit card company would be issuing a credit card solely in the name of one spouse, without recourse to the other spouse. So, what the law does is say that if you are going to represent "joint" income to the credit card company, then you have to sign onto the card jointly, so that both are liable.