English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

I'm talking about the overall decline of morals and family. Why don't all the broken families bother people? What's it gonna take the push the pendulum?

2007-03-22 18:48:44 · 2 answers · asked by Anonymous in Society & Culture Other - Society & Culture

2 answers

I'm not really convinced that people in the past had any better morals or were any more devoted to their families than people today are, they were just better at hiding it. I've read enough history to know, for example, that up until recently, people who could afford it generally paid other people to nurse and raise their children. I also know that during the Middle Ages, when the Church ruled everything, drunkenness, rape, and murder were quite common, even among monks and priests. I also know that during the 1950's, many housewives spent a lot of time cooking, baking, and cleaning, but spent less time educating their children or getting involved in their children's extracurricular activities than they do today.

There are certainly many problems in today's society that need to be improved, but many of these have to do with poverty, lack of education, and substance abuse rather than lack of morals or devotion to family. Perhaps the pendulum will swing back the other way when people start helping each other instead of just pointing fingers.

2007-03-22 19:18:06 · answer #1 · answered by magistra_linguae 6 · 0 0

Only received said as soon as for a dull motive, I was once going to enchantment it, however different solutions stated they simply enable attractive to sound reasonable. I imply probably it occurred a couple of occasions, however I suppose they had been kidding. Just pass along side it, learn the guiellines and phrases of carrier JUST IN CASE, then delete your e-mail speakme approximately it. Everyone will get said usually, and it;'s as a rule for dull causes, if any.

2016-09-05 12:48:11 · answer #2 · answered by rosebeckjr 4 · 0 0

fedest.com, questions and answers