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The Conversation: Reading Journal “Why Women Still Can’t Have it All”
Marie Slaughter served as an administrator for two years acting as a policy planner at the state department. Actually, Marie slaughter loved the job as it is evident while conversing with Fresh Air’s Terry Grosstelling, she told him that she was treasured with the job. Marie Slaughter shuttled to the department of state in Washington D.C each week from Princeton where her husband and their two teenage sons were living. During weekends Slaughter used to journey back to spend a while with the family. However, in 2011, Slaughter resolves to resign from her job because of his own sense of distinctiveness and determination. Indeed, Marie slaughter denunciates the present organization of American civilization in the article “Why Women Still Can’t Have It All” slaughter uses her particular knowledge on partaking an advanced rank policy in the state as evidence that equating both errands of occupation and a parental its quite challenging.
In his cover story title, Marie Slaughter mentions balancing actions that women encounter when possessing high-rank positions in the government as well as levitation children at the same moment. Marie Slaughter also specifies changes that need to be validated in both society and workplaces to ensure the invention of new prospects. These implementations include the realization of the necessities of both parents and granting a time of both. However, the greatest misery according to Slaughter remains cultural. Indeed, according to Marie slaughter, primary caregivers are automatically facing the choice of being regarded as having less experience in a certain field when they quit their job early and although they are performing their work at home.
Moreover, in the article Marie slaughter provides solutions, to enable the development of a community that favors and works for women. The first solution is reexploring the quest for contentment and the pioneering realm. Repression of the arc of a successful career is also a solution proclaimed by Marie Laughter. Finally, procuring men is the last solution according to Slaughter. However, Slaughter claims are quite questionable. Notably, men struggle more than women in equating life and work. Significantly, persons who need life with a high profession and rewarding should not finally put forward an argument, besides the selectivity of careers remain no longer based on gender, thus individuals have a motive to chose for themselves. Additionally, each person is responsible for participating in balancing equality by either advocating for or disapproving someone’s.
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