With putting women to work after world war two, it isn't surprising that they would want the power that came along with the responsibility of working. It also isn't surprising that a sɛҳuąƖ revolution would follow and a desire to control the natural consequences of that. After all, when torn between two incompatible responsibilities (child birth and rearing vs providing) women would be tempted to want an unnatural ability "to choose."
So, on the national level, I don't think you can solve the voting problem or the sɛҳuąƖ revolution and birth control revolution, without solving the working problem. Of course, I don't think you can solve the immigration problem or the low birth rate problem, without solving the working problem. Working women seem to be pretty much a national disaster
