Seth wrote:Families are not capitalistic, they are dictatorships, and they need to be dictatorships so that children will learn obedience to authority and the skills they need to hold down jobs in the real world.
I'm thinking the jobs I've held have been different from those you've held. "Obedience to authority" was not one of the primary skills I've had to exercise in my employment, as I've had employers who valued my contribution and recognized that it included advising authority when authority was mistaken. "Thinking clearly" and "being productive" have been far more important for me.
I do agree that families are dictatorships - or oligarchies that still look like dictatorships to the children - but good families are benevolent dictatorships. And the structure of modern society is such that people can't live in their families forever, so it behooves a parent to prepare children for society at large, which is not a dictatorship.
Therefore, from the ethical and moral perspective she owes her labor because she benefits from the existence of the household, which is provided for by her parents.
True. However, from an ethical and moral perspective, the it's also within the parent's purview to waive those requirements if they think best.
I'm not arguing that the person in the video was ethically or morally in the wrong. I'm arguing that from a practical standpoint, he didn't do what would best fulfill his goals for his children. He's certainly within his rights to take his course, but the parents in this thread are within their rights to take a different course if they think a different course would be more effective.
If she's going to get paid for doing chores (which means they aren't "chores") then she must also pay for enjoying the benefits of the household by paying rent on her room, for her clothing, food, toys, entertainment and everything else she consumes or enjoys in the home.
I think it may be effective to teach one concept at a time. I'm also only talking about teaching concepts - I'm not talking about implementing a full fledged market economy.
That said, I do know some people have also been effective at teaching their children budgeting skills by making them responsible for buying their own clothing and such.
Now, I'm fine with that if that's how how you think commerce ought to proceed, but giving her money for doing work that's expected as part of being a member of the household who benefits from having the chores done is just pandering to her obstinance and selfishness.
This is why I think the concepts should have been taught earlier, before she was an obstinate and selfish teenager.
Better she just does her chores and learns that life is a bitch most of the time and there ain't nothing free, but it can also cost you way more than you'd like to pay if you don't play by the rules.
That nothing is free, sure, but I'd rather raise my children as part of a generation that doesn't accept arbitrarily draconian rules. In a democratic society, they should be able to work for rules that are better than that.