<!--StartFragment-->This guy is working. He is not choosing to stay home, either. <o:p></o:p>
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Anyway, women have been working outside the home for more than 30 years, so that is an over-simplified argument.
Don't get me wrong, I think that if a woman chooses her career over family and father stays home, or greatly sacrifices his career to better be able raise children, he should get custody. Especially if that was a family choice that happened prior to a divorce and he is the primary care-taker. You just can't have it all. That is absolutely correct. This makes the argument equal because it only involves the mother and the father and compares them as primary caretakers.
That's why the laws are gender neutral and should be, even if judges aren't. But if he just getting another woman, even his mother, to raise the child (or vice versa) it is not a strong enough argument to change custody.
Heck, my friend is from asian, and that's how it works over there. Post-divorce, man's family (usually his mother or new wife) takes over raising children. One reason cited: Woman doesn't have the financial means to raise children on her own. Divorce is also very low. This is, perhaps, why modern western society had the overreaction in favor of women. For thousands of years children were owned by father. That's part of the tradition of children bearing father's last name. Mothers had no rights. Post-divorce any access she had was entirely decided by father.
So yeah, I understand your statement, but you also have a good point, that it is nearly impossible to both have a full-time intense career and be the best care-taker of your children. But single mom trying to get an education should not have custody taken away from her only for that reason. It is a catch-22. Because then she also doesn't have the financial means to support children. Another argument. Both ways she will always lose. And dad's mom (or wife, sister) is almost always there.
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