Podium

Family Values Are Un-American?

famiy values

America does not support family values


A happy and healthy nation begins with happy and healthy families. '
By Citizen Correspondent Kevin Bartoy
Date Posted: 06/07/08
Reader Rating: rating

In this election year, get ready to hear the endless discussion of "family values" and which party best exemplifies them. But, let's slice through the rhetoric and demand an honest discussion of truly valuing families in the United States.

Or, perhaps we should say that America does not support family values?

A recently released study by the Institute for Health and Social Policy at McGill University and The Project on Global Working Families reported that public policy in regards to working families in the United States lags "dramatically behind all high-income countries, as well as many middle- and low-income countries."

The findings of the study are truly shameful:

1) Out of 173 countries studied, 168 countries offer guaranteed leave with income to women in connection with childbirth; 98 of these countries offer 14 or more weeks paid leave. ... The U.S. guarantees no paid leave for mothers in any segment of the work force, leaving it in the company of only 4 other nations: Lesotho, Liberia, Papua New Guinea, and Swaziland.

2) Sixty-six countries ensure that fathers either receive paid paternity leave or have a right to paid parental leave; 31 of these countries offer 14 or more weeks of paid leave. The U.S. guarantees fathers neither paid paternity nor paid parental leave.

3) At least 107 countries protect working women’s right to breastfeed; in at least 73 of these the breaks are paid. The U.S. does not guarantee the right to breastfeed, even though breastfeeding is proven to reduce infant mortality.

4) 137 countries mandate paid annual leave. 121 countries guarantee 2 weeks or more each year. The U.S. does not require employers to provide paid annual leave.

5) At least 134 countries have laws that fix the maximum length of the work week. The U.S. does not have a maximum length of the work week or a limit on mandatory overtime per week.

6) While only 28 countries have restrictions or prohibitions on night work, 50 countries have government-mandated evening and night wage premiums. The U.S.


1 | 2 | 3 next








Tags:

Comments

Re: Family Values Are Un-American?

By kevinandjenny, June 9, 2008 at 03:18

You make a great point. And, we most definitely need to redefine what we mean by "family" in the United States. It has truly only been over the last century or so that "family" has come to mean "nuclear family" in this country. Before that last century, deaths were so common that many families were made up of children of friends and relatives, non-biological parents, etc.

True family values define "family" in its broadest sense.

True family values also leave "morality" out of that definition process.

Re: Family Values Are Un-American?

By Michelle Kenneth, June 8, 2008 at 04:50

I've noticed that it is up to the employers to decide what to give their employees. Some businesses get by on the least amount the government allows them to make. Other businesses want better/top notch employees, so they offer the best benefits packages on the market.

If the government will give all these benefits...you have to define the family. A family in America means more than just a nuclear family with the father, mother and two kids. There are single families, polygamous families, gay families, etc. The true minority is the nuclear family.

For those businesses that offer the best benefits packages, they understand that their employees have various family circumstances (including caring for sick, elderly parents, or having a child with disabilities). They turn a blind eye to what type of family you have. You're just protected under their policies.

For the government to mandate these same benefits, they are not allowed to turn a blind eye to what type of family an American has. That's not what politics is about.

Editor's Picks

My Father Gave My Mother AIDS

By Citizen Correspondent Christina Cure
Hollywood's 1952 film The Gift of the Magi retells O'Henry's 1906 story of love and... Full Story »