ChatterBank2 mins ago
It's the way they tell 'em
3 Answers
On the BBC News yesterday, reference was made to "the rise in the number of women who choose not to have children ...". I'm curious to know why reference was made to the 'rise' in women not having children, and not to the 'fall' in women who do have children - is it a matter of perspective, story angle, grammar, or choice? Any thoughts?
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Best Answer
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Yes - it's evidence that having children is the perceived norm in our culture because not having children is exceptional. There's also the cultural convention that inability to reproduce is taboo, so again 'choosing not to have children' is pseudo-judgmental socio-code for 'not having children but there's nothing wrong with her'.