Candace Owens argues young women’s rejection of 40-hour workweeks stems from feminist movements pushing them into unsustainable labor models, ignoring biological caregiving inclinations. She contrasts pre-feminist contentment with modern exhaustion, citing housing affordability struggles and Matt Walsh’s claim that childcare demands over 40 hours. Owens frames maternal work as instinctive and fulfilling while corporate jobs feel like "war," yet acknowledges not all women agree. The episode ties dissatisfaction to radical feminist ideals, promoting Preborn’s ultrasound-based rescues (200 babies daily) and urging donations ($28 saves one, $140 saves five) via #250 or preborn.com/slash, while weaving in a Christian anti-abortion perspective. [Automatically generated summary]
Feminists came around and they kind of transgendered people in the mind.
They brainwashed women into believing that they could be just like men.
Here, take a birth control pill, you won't get pregnant.
You can instead go to work, right?
Work just alongside your male counterparts.
And women are realizing that despite this dream that's sold to you, despite being propagandized in the school system, it's going to be so great, this is about freedom, that actually women are kind of miserable.
That maybe Mother Nature had some things right.
Maybe just the ability to be able to have children.
You know, to be able to feed children naturally from your body means, call me crazy, that you might be more naturally inclined to raise children.
That's what I recognize, that I know what to do with the kids in a way that does not come as naturally to my husband.
We're talking about infants.
Women just know what to do.
But you say these things and the feminists go, oh, how dare you say that?
Men should be doing the exact same work.
Okay, they can.
Yeah, sure, you could beat it into a guy's head and say, no, you must raise infants at home every day, but it's not what comes naturally to them, right?
And so, yes, we should instead answer her question.
For the fifth consecutive year, abortion remains the world's leading cause of fetus mortality, even despite the overturning of Roe v. Wade.
Tragically, it's been reported that the number of infants' deaths caused by abortion is greater than the number of deaths attributed to the next seven causes of death combined.
Preborn is leading the charge to turn this around.
Every day, Preborn's network clinics rescue 200 unborn babies.
unidentified
I think I was maybe 9 or 10 weeks when I was thinking about abortion.
and just with my upbringing as Christian roots, it was really, it was something I couldn't talk
to anybody about as far as abortion because no one would understand.
♪♪♪ I was just kind of like, Lord, if this is, you know,
if this is the way, you know, let me know.
If this is not the way, give me a sign, you know, before I walk through these doors.
And I was, as I was getting ready to walk up the steps and touch the doorknob, you know, a guardian angel, as I felt, he came.
By introducing a mother to her child via ultrasound, a baby's chance of survival could double.
Preborn's work has only just begun.
By the time I finish this life-saving message, two unborn children will have been aborted in this country.
Will you join Preborn and make 2024 the biggest baby-saving year in history?
One ultrasound is just $28, and $140 will offer five babies a chance at life.
Just dial pound 250 and say the keyboard, baby.
That's pound 250, baby.
Or, you can donate securely at preborn.com slash Candace.
That's preborn.com slash Candace.
What's interesting is that my colleague, Matt Walsh, who's always on Trouble on X, formerly Twitter, answered her.
He responded to her, and this is what he had to say.
He wrote, Honestly boggles my mind that so many people think 40 hours of work a week is a lot.
That leaves you at least 5 or 6 waking hours a day during the week to yourself and 2 full days on the weekend.
How much more free time do you really think you should have?
How interesting.
Matt Walsh is a man, so yes, it comes naturally to him.
I find that men are able to do the same thing day in and day out like warriors.
They're just biologically predisposed to doing these sorts of things.
And women, when you see them in a household, you see that the multitasking, the way that a woman is able to deal with a child that is screaming while also handling other things, we are designed in that way and in that capacity.
And unfortunately, women are not willing to just let go of this feminist narrative and to recognize that nothing that feminists convinced us of actually makes us happy today.
It might help you pay your bills, bare minimum.
But if we were looking before the explosion of second wave feminism, that young woman
would likely have found a partner.
She would likely have already been married.
She may have one kid.
They told you that that was prison.
Oh my gosh, why would you want that?
That's absolute prison.
One man going to work would have been enough because women were not yet in the labor force
to support an entire family based on his income alone.
And that was a different existence and a different world.
But if you ask me, quite frankly, women were happier when I think about that.
My grandmother was not crying every day on TikTok, or obviously didn't have TikTok, but crying every day about the stresses of what it was like to raise her children.
She stayed at home.
She raised her kids.
She made dinner every single night.
And that stuff made her whole.
It's just a complete reversal of the roles.
Matt added on to the commentary, saying this.
He wrote, of course the reason you see women in these videos so often is that most women
don't actually want to work professional careers at all, but they've been pushed into this
direction by society.
But even so, we should be clear that taking care of children will mean working more than
40 hours a week, a lot more.
Life is work no matter how you slice it.
Suck it up and deal with it.
Yes, but it's different kinds of work, right?
It is a different kind of work when I spend the entire day fully exhausted by my children.
Obviously, I have three of them now and the oldest is three.
It's exhausting, but it's a different kind of work because it's rewarding and I know what to do and I am getting a sort of feedback that for me is So much more rewarding than you would get in the climate of an office.
And maybe the feedback that a man gets when he climbs a corporate ladder, you know, feels like he's going out to war and conquering.
But these are things, again, that we should be willing to talk about, that we should be willing to acknowledge.
Is it every single woman that feels this overwhelmed?
No.
But it is, in my view, a large majority of women who are feeling dissatisfied and are unwilling to look at the fact that it is our own fault.
for grabbing onto a radical feminist movement.
Not our fault because we were younger and it happened before we were born, but we're still embracing those ideas and looking down upon women who are finally saying, no thank you.