Contrary to the propaganda of Polish feminists trying to paint Polish males as insensitive, irresponsible machos, a survey carried out by Discovery Networks showed that Polish men are among Europe's top advocates of family and fatherhood. 64% of the Polish men surveyed listed having and raising children as the most important thing in life. That compares with France (57%), Germany (50%), Britain (40%) and bottow-dwelling Holland (29%).
POLISH MALES FAVOR FAMILIES, FATHERHOOD
Good point, but look what going on now with the polish women
Polish feminists trying to paint Polish males as insensitive, irresponsible machos
I wonder why that is? Oh well let them run to Arabs.
To Anglopole- explain further.
polishgirltx
27 Oct 2008 / #4
POLISH MALES FAVOR FAMILIES, FATHERHOOD
oh good...so now men can stay at home, clean, cook and take care of the kids while wives go to work and make money...
but look what going on now with the polish women
what is going on?
Patrycja19 61 | 2679
27 Oct 2008 / #5
showed that Polish men are among Europe's top advocates of family and fatherhood
I can advocate too.. its about doing it.. actually raising the child, not going to work coming home, banging the wife and getting her knocked up, and making her do all the late night feedings, diaper changes, doctors visits..
if this was something discussed in their survey, then I retract my comments, but I think the polish feminists are angry for a reason. maybe the survey was just that.. a survey.. not complete data to prove or disprove anything .
64% of the Polish men surveyed listed having and raising children as the most important thing in life.
its all good if this is true, but its only showing they say having and raising children is the most important thing in life, it doesnt show they actually did this
saying it and doing it are two different things.
hi i wonder if any one can help me?
i am doing an assignment for university and need to find out about parenting and traditions from a fathers point of view and how different it is from raising children in Poland then coming to England
can any one help me please
i am doing an assignment for university and need to find out about parenting and traditions from a fathers point of view and how different it is from raising children in Poland then coming to England
can any one help me please
Lodz_The_Boat 32 | 1522
28 Oct 2008 / #7
oh good...so now men can stay at home, clean, cook and take care of the kids while wives go to work and make money...
Its not exactly...
Wives should have all freedom... but women and men (though equal) are specialised for different projects in life. Both together take the life forward, like both the wings of the bird help it soar with balance and pace. Even though the wings are in opposite direction.... yest both being equally important.
What harm if the loving husband earns enough for the other part, the wife, to maintain the household economy and see to the children while the husband is out gathering. The shopping, maintenance, children, economy of the household, cash flow.... even though the husband comes forward to give whatever help he can to the other part (the wife), still its a job which needs 200% attention.
I think that would be a balanced family.
what is going on?
People got many kinds of complains I guess (stereotypes, interracial culture, education, work...etc etc) ... better you mind the right things.
how different it is from raising children in Poland then coming to England
In England people are alot more busy...to see what the hell their children are upto. I honestly mean it.... I dont think English children are learning good things in the parks..
tomekcatkins 8 | 130
29 Oct 2008 / #8
and bottow-dwelling Holland (29%).
First I was looking for a Polish wife, but now I read this, I guess I'd better look for a family-caring Polish bloke. - Just to compensate my Dutch lack of fatherhood.. :P
Is it easy to adopt children in Poland as homo-couple?? He he. :D