The European Union wants to do away with housewives altogether and stay-at home mothers
By Michael Smith (Veshengro)
Anyone who knows what is going on in the minds of those that are on the loose in Brussels and Strasbourg will know exactly where this is leading, no doubt, and why this is being advocated.
While reports state that this is because Europe needs more workers something else is behind this and we shall get to this in due course.
According to recent reports the EU Commissions has ordered Germany, as well as the Netherlands and Austria, to put measures in place to integrate all housewives and mothers into the labor market. This means first and foremost the creation of nursery places and kindergartens.
Old people and foreigners and those without qualifications shall also be more opportunities to work.
I am still at a loss where all those jobs are supposed to be for if I ask my friends in Germany there are very few; jobs, not friends.
The real reason for wanting to “integrate” housewives and mothers in the labor market, by providing kindergarten places for every child is so that the home has less influence over the children. The home is not the right place for a child, according to those that make the decisions at EU level and who are answerable to no one.
In order to achieve this EU Commission President José Manuel Barroso says that the member states must take the Nordic countries, such as Sweden, etc., as example.
Not only does the EU demand that more custody places are being created where to keep children but households where only one person is working will be penalized by higher taxation.
This is totally, as I have said, in line with the Zeitgeist to remove children as early and as young as possible from the influence of the family and the home and there are many well-paid psychologists in the system who claim that is is better from children to be educated in a group of peers rather than in the home.
We have see this being done in the former USSR, the former GDR and also in, obviously, fascist Germany of the 1930s and 1940s, but also, with devastating results, in the Kibbutz system of the Zionist state.
The story about integration into the labor market of those women who wish to be housewives and full-time mothers is nothing but a ruse as, in all honesty, for every job in the EU labor market there are tens to hundreds of applicants.
So, where is the supposed labor shortage? It does not exist. There are few jobs to be had, even in Germany and Austria, even though those countries fare a little better that Britain or Ireland in this field.
© 2011