[P]olicies sold as protecting women can be used to bludgeon men, and they should spur greater skepticism of the idea that women need bigger government to succeed.
The War on Women rhetoric may be intended to derail specific candidacies, but it also derails needed public-policy debates. With trillion-dollar deficits, we need to make tough choices about funding priorities. Calling attempts to control government's costs an assault on women will only make deliberations less productive.
Monday, May 7, 2012
What if the "War on Women" is a War of Women... on men?
A question that occurred to me while reading this Wall Street Journal column by Carrie Lukas.
Labels:
employment discrimination,
gender politics
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