May
15th
  9:21:50 AM

Mother’s Day postscript

And now for something completely normal and very nice from the Mother's Day menu. Recently we put up the Proctor & Gamble "Best job in the world" video. Here's an ad from Publix, the US supermarket chain. It's employee-owned, by the way, and among Fortune's top 100 companies to work for. I would certainly give them a go if I were not thousands of miles away.



 
about this blog | Bookmark and Share

Search this blog

 Subscribe to FamilyEdge
rss RSS feed of posts

 Recent Posts
Humanity amongst the horror of Woolwich attack
25 May 2013
Housewife revival is not such a bad thing
23 May 2013
Declaration of 2013 World Congress of Families
21 May 2013
World Congress of Families 2013
19 May 2013
Rise of the stay-at-home dad
15 May 2013

 MercatorNet blogs
Style and culture: Tiger Print
US political scene: Sheila Liaugminas
News about bioethics: BioEdge
From the editors: Conniptions

 Archive
May 2013 | Apr 2013 | Mar 2013 | more >>

 From MercatorNet's home page

The Boy Scouts cave in
24 May 2013
Under enormous pressure, they have voted to welcome openly gay scouts. What message does the change in policy send young…

A boy’s life with unisex scouts
23 May 2013
The Boy Scouts of America will vote today on whether they will admit homosexual scouts. Will they become the Unisex…

Necessary excuses
23 May 2013
“Comfort women”, carpet bombing, atom bombs, lethal drones and genocide can all be justified by appeals to necessity.

Digital multitasking: scourge or blessing?
22 May 2013
How can we teach students to focus on what they ought to be doing?

Who or what is a “child”?
22 May 2013
Canada's Parliament lacks the courage to take a stand on defining when an unborn child will be protected by the…


 Tags
names, gender, sexual behaviour, United States, South Africa, economics, character, National Marriage Project, youth, video games, divorce, parenthood, media, men, sexualisation of children, demography, HIVAIDS, Spain, research, child abuse, social networking, Sweden, teenage pregnancy, work, Facebook, European Union, gendercide, education, texting, language, boys, young adult, family meals, immigration, childcare, mental health, child wellbeing, polygamy, media ethics, family structure, homeschooling, technology, feminism, homosexuality, child obesity, poverty, USA, child poverty, recession, character education, UK, same-sex parenting, sleep, parental rights, adolescence, daycare, sex education, child development, birth control, child welfare, mothers, family relationships, children, France, HomeMakers Project, Canada, psychology, dating, child safety, anger, family values, suicide, pregnancy, one-child policy, Hollywood, Barack Obama, friendship, smacking, women, adoption, Australia, teenagers, work-life balance, obesity, health, emerging adults, fashion, happiness, fertility, gender equality, brain, New Zealand, China, books, pornography, marriage, large families, children's health, family breakdown, abortion, morality, violence, self-control, modesty, Africa, family, baby boomers, girls, religion, prostitution, adolescents, schools, unemployment, fathers, family economics, AIDS, United Nations, fatherhood, ageing population, abstinence, family policy, child behaviour, commitment, contraception, working mothers, single motherhood, ageing, trafficking, internet safety, parents, television, parenting, same-sex marriage, education of children, families, cohabitation, teen pregnancy, social media, motherhood, internet, celebrities,