Senethro
Overlord
Men and women tend to pick different lifestyles. That something else than discrimination.
Do you have an example society with a reasonable history of egalitarianism to show whether this is an effect of culture or biology?
Men and women tend to pick different lifestyles. That something else than discrimination.
No argument there.Well, equal pay for equal work would be a good start.
Personally, if I were having a difficult or awkward time carrying something and was offered help, I'd accept with a smile and a "thank you."That said, there's still a lot of sexism in my union, and it's pretty insulting. We see it all the time when a new guy is on our crew - trying to take a load out of my female co-worker's hands. It implies that she's not willing or able to do the work. It's *usually* masked as a polite gesture, but that doesn't make it less insulting.
Just an example. There are others
The thing is just looking at job and qualification and comparing salaries is not a proper statistical analysis, that is, you can't claim sexism is a significant factor.The pay-gap for the same job with the same qualifications in the Swedish private sector is roughly 10% - thats significant enough to react on as discrimination. The public sectors is much better at about 1-5%.
Sweden are rank #2 in the gender-equality index. The US is #42 together with Malaysia and Hungary. The UK is trailing Croatia on rank #34. Linky.
Dude, you sure that's a mask? Also, carrying loads is assuming the role of the laborer rather than the skilled worker. It's a sign of respect? At least I know it can be even if it isn't always. You better believe when my dad and I are working together and there's something to be carried and lugged while the work is going on it's been me doing that for decades. Not because my father can't carry and lug, but because whatever he's working on he's doing better than I could.
I get what you are saying, but I really don't think you can presume cleanly what you seem to be presuming. It's just as bad as thinking "gurls can't carry the stuffs."
Saying that the problem sorts itself is being hugely disrespectful to all the people who took action to bring the current state of affairs about. Indeed, given the number of states legislatures in America seeking to remove access to abortion by a thousand cuts so skirting federal laws, it may be a case of having to run to stay in one place.However, the whole thing seems to solve itself. It just needs time.
So the final question is: Do we want to be patient or do we want to speed things up by making use of a very problematic tool? I tend toward patience.
In some ways, feminism is a misnomer, since it describes a heterogenous group of sub-movements that all have in common their goal of women empowerment. Most self-describing feminists that have been the vogue in recent academic discourse are part of a radical fringe. They do not deserve to be labelled under a common banner with say, suffragettes.
In these situations were all equals - were a crew loading or unloading a truck.
Let me get this straight.Saying that the problem sorts itself is being hugely disrespectful to all the people who took action to bring the current state of affairs about.
Do you have an example society with a reasonable history of egalitarianism to show whether this is an effect of culture or biology?
If the suffragettes and their methods were still in use then you would still be using your scare words to describe them. Its only because they're comfortably far back in the past and the modern consensus agrees what they did was good that you don't call them radical.
Let me get this straight.
Because people had to fight for the current state of affairs I must support the continuation of this fight using quotas or otherwise I am being disrespectful to those people?
If so, then that is not a kind of respect I care for. Because it doesn't make a whole lot of sense to me.
The trend is there from what I know. So yes, the specific issue I referred to, the difficulty of women to advance in their careers relative to men because of their sex lacking acceptance, does seem to solve itself
The abortion craze in the US is an entirely different matter and I share your concern. Though let me add that the feminist argument for abortion is IMO very silly. Abortion is either wrong or right because it is either wrong or okay to kill embryos at certain stages of their development. And weather that is so is about the question why it is even wrong to kill humans and how that applies to embryos. I understand that the mother has own important concerns and that feminists are concerned about her freedom of choice, but it should be obvious on the face of it that however important those concerns are they are dwarfed to irrelevance by the question of life and death.
But to be clear - I am pro-abortion. But surely not for feminist reasons.
At last, I don't know where this quote of yours is from, but it seems to me that you are comparing apples and oranges.
Dude, don't you know that they only wanted that because drunkard man-pigs were beating their wifes?That they were. And American history whitewashes the fact that while they won the vote(hip hip hooray!) in their radical crusade they were also the driving force behind Prohibition(yaaaaay.) Wanting the progress without the Prohibition is not an unreasonable stance.
Actually, now that i think about it "privilege" and "you're like a racist" are actually not the best arguments.[...]
Well, equal pay for equal work would be a good start.
Methodists
You should totally ramp it up to Holocaust comparisons.
Shoot. Pro lifers already own that.
Primarily biology. Culture just grows from it. Men are bigger than women. Women can get pregnant, men do not. Women do better in formal academic settings (i.e. earn higher grades, complete degrees earlier) while men are physically stronger.
One notable field where women and men are equal is intelligence and mental things in general. Overall, it shouldn't be taboo to emphasise differences between men and women where appropriate without being labelled a sexist pig.
Why should you have it easier (with the whole whose-boat-i-share) than us liberals?Heynow.
b) subscribe to the notions of popular [CULTURE] "[LABEL]" who are curiously failing to succeed in these causes even though they have with "[BUZZWORD]" and "[FREE SPACE]" the best arguments one could have.
Why should you have it easier (with the whole whose-boat-i-share) than us liberals?![]()
Isn't the gender wage gap (in the U.S. at least) a myth?
That's just the first article I found on the subject, so excuse me if it's crappy or whatever. I learned about this a couple weeks ago, so there's got to be more sources than that. Not that forbes isn't a good source, but I haven't looked through the article in detail, so I have no idea what else is in there.
Not that we don't need feminism or anything, but just sayin'
In 2001, Karen Kornbluh estimated that womens earnings drop by 7.5 percent with a first child and 8 percent with a second. It also explains why the wage-gap starts out small when men and women first hit the labor market and then grows significantly when they start having families.
So our economy punishes women for the biological reality that they bear children. The AEI guys are apparently fine with that and want you to believe that it somehow renders the pay gap a myth but its important to understand that it doesnt need to be this way. The US is one of only three countries along with Liberia and Papua New Guinea that doesnt require employers to offer maternity (or paternity) leave. When American women have a baby, their jobs often arent waiting for them to return; in most other developed countries, they are. This is a big reason why only four high-income countries in the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development have larger gender pay gaps than the US.
Among the BLSs thirteen industry categories, women make less than men in every single one. What this means is that even in womens fields, men are going to rake in more. In fact, men have been entering traditionally female-dominated sectors during the recovery period, and as The New York Times noted, theyre meeting with great successmen earn more than women even in female-dominated jobs. Women can enter engineering all they want, but their pay still wont catch up to mens.
Economists generally attribute about 40% of the pay gap to discrimination making about 60% explained by differences between workers or their jobs. However, even the explained differences between men and women might be more complicated. For example: If high school girls are discouraged from taking the math and science classes that lead to high-paying STEM jobs, shouldnt we in some way count that as a lost equal earnings opportunity? As one commentator put it recently, I dont think that simply saying we have 9 cents of discrimination and then 14 cents of life choices is very satisfying. In other words, no matter how you slice the data, pay discrimination is a real and persistent problem that continues to shortchange American women and their families.
So our economy punishes women for the biological reality that they bear children