Matches in DBpedia 2015-10 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Comprehensive_Child_Development_Bill_of_1972> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 22 of
22
with 100 triples per page.
- Comprehensive_Child_Development_Bill_of_1972 abstract "The United States Congress passed the Comprehensive Child Development Bill in 1971, with Senate vote 63 to 17. If this bill had become law it would have provided a multi-billion dollar national day care system designed partially to make it easier for single parents to work and care for children simultaneously, thereby alleviating strain on the welfare system. President Richard Nixon vetoed the bill in 1972.Nixon's veto and his accompanying rationale reveal several staple thought processes of Cold War politics in the United States. He said that the bill would implement a "communal approach to child-rearing," tying it to broad-based fears of Communism. He also said it had "family-weakening implications." The idea that America was distinguished by strong traditional families was often used (by Nixon and other American leaders) to contrast it with the USSR and to resist feminist demands for greater equality for women. Nixon's famous "kitchen debates" with Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev included prominent examples of this concept. The bill incited some political backlash from anti-welfare and anti-feminist activists who opposed the idea of women in the workforce and who were leery of allowing children to be partially raised outside of the home.".
- Comprehensive_Child_Development_Bill_of_1972 wikiPageID "17083889".
- Comprehensive_Child_Development_Bill_of_1972 wikiPageLength "2033".
- Comprehensive_Child_Development_Bill_of_1972 wikiPageOutDegree "5".
- Comprehensive_Child_Development_Bill_of_1972 wikiPageRevisionID "538497946".
- Comprehensive_Child_Development_Bill_of_1972 wikiPageWikiLink Category:1971_in_law.
- Comprehensive_Child_Development_Bill_of_1972 wikiPageWikiLink Cold_War.
- Comprehensive_Child_Development_Bill_of_1972 wikiPageWikiLink Kitchen_Debate.
- Comprehensive_Child_Development_Bill_of_1972 wikiPageWikiLink Richard_Nixon.
- Comprehensive_Child_Development_Bill_of_1972 wikiPageWikiLink Women_in_the_workforce.
- Comprehensive_Child_Development_Bill_of_1972 wikiPageWikiLinkText "Comprehensive Child Development Act".
- Comprehensive_Child_Development_Bill_of_1972 wikiPageWikiLinkText "Comprehensive Child Development Bill of 1972".
- Comprehensive_Child_Development_Bill_of_1972 hasPhotoCollection Comprehensive_Child_Development_Bill_of_1972.
- Comprehensive_Child_Development_Bill_of_1972 wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Comprehensive_Child_Development_Bill_of_1972 subject Category:1971_in_law.
- Comprehensive_Child_Development_Bill_of_1972 comment "The United States Congress passed the Comprehensive Child Development Bill in 1971, with Senate vote 63 to 17. If this bill had become law it would have provided a multi-billion dollar national day care system designed partially to make it easier for single parents to work and care for children simultaneously, thereby alleviating strain on the welfare system.".
- Comprehensive_Child_Development_Bill_of_1972 label "Comprehensive Child Development Bill of 1972".
- Comprehensive_Child_Development_Bill_of_1972 sameAs m.0417p8y.
- Comprehensive_Child_Development_Bill_of_1972 sameAs Q5156958.
- Comprehensive_Child_Development_Bill_of_1972 sameAs Q5156958.
- Comprehensive_Child_Development_Bill_of_1972 wasDerivedFrom Comprehensive_Child_Development_Bill_of_1972?oldid=538497946.
- Comprehensive_Child_Development_Bill_of_1972 isPrimaryTopicOf Comprehensive_Child_Development_Bill_of_1972.