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I am a bus driver.
Jack, there used to be a lot of girls (late teens early twenties) who used to ride around and "date" various drivers (myself included) they weren't worried if you were married or courting etc, just a bit of fun, there were some who'd been "out" with in the region of ten of the other drivers, some of them preferred married men.
Mosaic, that sounds like a form of brainwashing, some good points though.
Ankou, absolutely bang on.
Sara, if you were to go back thirty five years and present the argument that the feminist cited presents now, you'd have been shouted down, so when was she right?
The two women lived in two different universes, coped with two different realities, the feminist (if I knew her name I'd use it) wouldn't have lasted five minutes in the world Tammy grew up in.
Wynette was born into poverty, wed into poverty, was surrounded by poverty, through her own inate skill and talent she ennunciated the pain, the suffering and the reality of the lives of many of the women she sung to, that's a talent.
Far from attacking her, the feminist groups should have applauded her for identifying the problems and try offer choice and opportunity to such people, and that goes for the men too!