A woman's value decreases the more children she has - Cam Newton

Cam Newton recently said that a woman’s value decreases the more children she has. The statement is simple enough to repeat, but heavy enough to unpack. It is the kind of remark that provokes immediate reaction, yet beneath the surface, it exposes something deeper about society’s assumptions about gender, worth, and autonomy.

What many miss in the outrage is the mirror it holds up to all of us. Value is rarely intrinsic in the eyes of others—it is assigned. A mother with one child is seen as balanced, manageable, even desirable. A mother with many? She is perceived as “less available,” “more complicated,” “burdened.” The judgment is not about her choices—it is about what others need to feel in control. And here, a man’s comment becomes less about women and more about ego, comfort, and societal conditioning.

The tension is instructive. It asks: why do we allow reproductive choices to determine perceived worth? Why do we accept the idea that a person’s contributions, intelligence, or character could be outweighed by numbers on a birth certificate? The question lingers because it does not have a simple answer—and perhaps that is the point. The discomfort forces reflection: whose definition of value are we really living by?

✍️ πŸ‘€ ☝️πŸ‘† πŸ“Ž

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