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Culture War Roundup for the week of January 27, 2025

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Without having seen the_others' comment, I had written but not yet posted:

The counterargument is "I work for the family, my work increases your ability to bring in money and increases its availability for the family's use, the money is our money," with frankly a side of "What the hell is wrong with you of course it is!"

Also with something big and important like a house, "We can't afford it" and "I'll let you know" is not good enough; there need to be details. If it turns into "Stop nagging me about giving you details," that's honestly a red flag, what are you hiding dude? If that happened to a friend of mine I'd suggest she either start planning her exit or else at least open the next few bills that come in the mail. Can't? (Like, he makes sure to collect them before you can, or you know he'd blow up at you to the point that you'd be frightened?) Parade of red flags, plan your exit.

But yeah on places like AITAH on Reddit it typically goes as you describe.

I did consider mentioning the phrase "financial abuse"--because it is.

But it does also seem to me that perhaps among younger people especially (IOW, Reddit commenters)...well, 2 things:

  • these ideas have maybe been lost / not adopted; and more specifically (possibly a side point)

  • recent parents having often relied on "when you're helping pay for it, then you can have a say" to control their adolescent children, has left modern young people more inclined toward this type of attitude toward the SAHP.

To put it another way, some subcultures maybe don't have (not sure if "lost" or "never developed") the social technology to equitably manage a partnership which includes a SAHP.

It may be that where you live will affect whether your friend would win in court on financial abuse, IDK...but yeah, I would call it that.

And I do think that taking things all the way to separation over something like low-level bullying would be obviously disastrous for a mom with no money and small kids who adore their dad.

I wouldn't call that low-level bullying. Even if it's just "he doesn't want to move and he thinks the best way to handle this is to lie and make excuses," that's a big problem for the future stability of the partnership, and needs addressing sooner rather than later. Other possibilities: He's poor at managing money (really doesn't ever think they can afford it yet impulse-buys); he deliberately puts his needs above those of everyone else in the household; he's secretly gambling, using drugs, cheating, or visiting prostitutes... None of these things are minor, from a long-term family stability POV.

I mean, I agree that if she has no established career she has less leverage. But IMO this behavior is egregious enough that ignoring it would be a bad idea even for a mom with no money and small kids.