You're just saying that because you are a Christian and want to kill all atheists.![]()
Not all atheists -- just the feminist ones.
You're just saying that because you are a Christian and want to kill all atheists.![]()
Not all atheists -- just the feminist ones.![]()
1. Gender stereotypes damage everyone.
2. On average, women are measurably deficient in money and power when compared to men. (This in no way negates or diminishes the suffering of men in other areas like child custody.)
3. Everyone should fight to stop gender-based inequality.
.
I would like to address this one specifically. I would like to ask any males here, who've applied for manual labor jobs; if you apply for say, contruction clean up, do your interviewers typically inform you that you get all sweaty and dirty? I've always wondered if they honestly think no one knows this? Granted, I will admit that my sarcastic reply probably didn't help me get that job but the way he was talking to me was really getting on my nerves. Do you really think I have no idea that contruction clean up is hard work? How about applying for a job at a tire place or to do oil changes; do they typically try to warn all potential applicants that your hands get stained with grease? Is this something that most people don't already know? It is not as easy for a woman to get manual labor jobs.
Has it ever occurred to you and other feminists that the reality of women making less money has a lot more to do with women being mothers than it does with some sort of secret cabal movement trying to oppress women?
Has it ever occurred to you and other feminists that the reality of women making less money has a lot more to do with women being mothers than it does with some sort of secret cabal movement trying to oppress women?
When I stayed home with my kids it didn't mean I didn't work. But I was willing to take on lower paying jobs in order to get more flexibility in my hours and my days off.
I often took jobs beneath my skill level or at a lower rate of pay simply because the commute was closer or I was able to work shifts that allowed me to be home when my kids came home from school.
Some examples "overnight shift at a Limo Dispatch"
"working in a blood lab" (the hours were 8-3 and the office was two blocks away from my kids school)
I know I'm not the only one. I tried bringing this up before and was pummeled by Skeptic Ginger as making disparaging comments towards working mothers. In fact I was trying to bring up the source of the disparity. Many mothers are unwilling to put their kids in afterschool programs and daycare centers for 10-12 hours a day. So they make compromises in their work.
I don't want to speak for any other mother but I would wager that this is not an uncommon phenomenon at all. I have seen it very often. It also explains why more women are in Graduate School. The idea of slinging hash or doing other menial work pales in comparison to furthering your education.
When you take college classes you can arrange them around your children's schedules.
I have literally gone on interviews and been willing to take $10,000 less a year if I could work from home on certain days or could have the days or hours that I wanted. Why? Because not only didn't I have the cost of day care or baby sitting, I could be home with my kids more.
It was a CHOICE not a victimization. This is what I mean about distorting the figures and statistics by ignoring realities and putting a "victim" spin on the numbers.
In the past men were far more likely to get promotions and make more money because they were traditionally considered the "head of household" it was a meme that existed. It was wonderfully explored in Lily Tomlin's character in the movie 9 to 5. Nowadays single mothers are much more understood and that disparity is shifting.
However to say that because women make less money it is automatically a sign of injustice is wrong. It once again paints women as victims rather than autonomous women.
If you're tying to cite it as evidence backing up your assertions, then yes.
Yes I do.
Then you shouldn't have brought it up. And you really shouldn't have doubled down and gotten indignant when Travis doubted your story.
The men in my acquaintence were primarily focused on the earning potential and growth opportunities associated with different career fields. For them, a job was a necessary part of adulthood, and its purpose was its ability to support a lifestyle.
The women in my acquaintance were primarily focused on job satisfaction and working conditions associated with different career fields. For them, a job was an element of personal identity, and its purpose was to fulfill personal needs.
It was not particularly surprising, then, that after college, a large portion of the men went after "mind-numbing" jobs promising career growth, while the women held out for "satisfying" jobs pursuing what they "loved". And, assuming no gender discrimination in hiring or promotions at all, which of these two groups would you expect to be making more money in five years?
Of course this idea "occurred to me and other feminists". No need to insult my intelligence.
You are absolutely right to say that choice is not victimization. If parents take time to analyze the costs and benefits I fully support whatever decision they make.
Stay-at-home parents do pay a price, though. They are financially dependent on their spouse and lose years of career advancement. For whatever reason, this price is almost exclusively paid by women. In 2010, there were 5 million stay-at-home moms but only 154,000 stay-at-home dads. Why this gap? I fear the the stereotype that "dad can't parent" is the cause. I hope that fear is wrong but the data demands an explanation. I don't want stay-at-home parents to be ashamed, I want parenting decisions unclouded by arbitrary gender roles. Maybe your choice wasn't clouded. I hope not.
The point is moot anyway. Women make less than men even when controlling for variables like children so your hypothesis is insufficient to explain the wage gap.
No it's not exclusively paid by women.
Women don't exist in a vacuum. Neither do children. Fathers are more than sperm donors that walk out the door and leave it all behind.
This kind of manipulation of information is what causes me to have very little respect for feminists. Any married couple will tell you that the burdens in the family are felt by all members of the family.
Of course fathers aren't just sperm donors. That's precisely the point I'm trying to make. Men can and do make wonderful caregivers financially and emotionally. That's why I don't understand why they aren't stay-at-home parents more often.
This kind of manipulation of information is what causes me to have very little respect for feminists. Any married couple will tell you that the burdens in the family are felt by all members of the family. There are different kinds of burdens. Just because a woman traditionally will have one type of burden doesn't mean that men have it easier. I see hard working men every day with many struggles that are completely glossed over by feminists because they have a blind spot of only seeming to care about things that traditionally matter to women.
I know many many many men who feel like hamsters in a cage running in place to pay their bills. They are stressed out, they feel unempowered. Men have many health issues that relate to their stresses. But since they don't matter to feminists we'll just completely ignore them and focus our attention elsewhere.
As far as the gap, read your own source. There are different variables not just one variable. But one major consideration is that women can only conceive for a limited period of time. So women are often trying to combine, college, work and family withing a two decades of graduating from college. Men can have children for their entire lives, so this is a very significant factor.
And once again if you read your own source studies show that women are WILLING to make less money. That is a consideration you want to ignore.
No they must somehow be "victims." Not autonomous women who aren't as worried about making more money because in general the cultural meme is that men are supposed to "take care of the women and the children" and so this effects the decisions and motivations of women.
It's common sense really.
But I know that's difficult for some people.
Also why the gap between women and men as far as stay at home goes? This is also lost on feminists who don't have children. Staying home with your children is a job that many women love. THEY LOVE IT. THEY WANT TO DO IT. THEY CHOOSE TO DO IT.
You are typical of feminists in setting up "CAREER ADVANCEMENT" as a more important thing than the "career of being a homemaker" somehow this is lost?
When I know how to take care of my children very well, when I know how to cook excellent meals, when I know how to make a home it is not "lost years of career advancement" It IS my career. Just because you don't consider it a real job doesn't mean I don't.
I would expect there's more to it even than that.
See, among men and women my age when I was in college, I observed an interesting pattern. Note that this was primarily middle class and upper class students.
The men in my acquaintence were primarily focused on the earning potential and growth opportunities associated with different career fields. For them, a job was a necessary part of adulthood, and its purpose was its ability to support a lifestyle.
The women in my acquaintance were primarily focused on job satisfaction and working conditions associated with different career fields. For them, a job was an element of personal identity, and its purpose was to fulfill personal needs.
It was not particularly surprising, then, that after college, a large portion of the men went after "mind-numbing" jobs promising career growth, while the women held out for "satisfying" jobs pursuing what they "loved". And, assuming no gender discrimination in hiring or promotions at all, which of these two groups would you expect to be making more money in five years?
As another data point, I'll submit myself. I'm at a pretty low rung on the ladder where I work. I'm also happy with the kind of work I do and the amount of money I make -- and I like the fact that the responsibility level I have right now allows more time spent with family than at higher levels of the company. I will not climb this ladder nearly as fast as someone who's more interested in increased responsibility for a higher reward, because it's just not as important to me. If men and women have different training or inclinations as to what they're aiming for, whether more like me or more like my top-gunning colleagues, I would expect the outcome to also be different.
Significant stigma. The stay-at-home dads I know face unique problems in two directions:
1) Parents and in-laws berate them for not supporting their family. It doesn't matter that the wife is better qualified and supports the family fine on her income; it's "just not right".
2) Moms refuse to allow them to be a part of the community. Moms actually take their kid away when a man comes to the playground; they aren't welcome at stay-at-home mom meetings and activities. The moms are suspicious. It's the old males-as-predators meme, which for some reason persists even when the man clearly has an age-appropriate kid of his own.
So I don't blame dads for not wanting to deal with the stigma; I certainly wouldn't want my spouse, male or female, to have to undergo the mental stresses of stay-at-home parenting without community support.
I have not heard anyone defend any of those mistakes by claiming that men can't be discriminated against. And anywhichway, that defence would never hold up in a court. It is not an institutionalized inequality.
Thanks much for the response, Kingsterino, and NOPE - not a chance that you've lost any respect from my point of reference. I only lose respect for folks when they're deliberate do-badders, harmers, deceivers and so forth. Oh - and if they're a Baltimore Ravens fan (but that's obvious).Jeez, you go away for a weekend and the furniture gets rearranged...Anyway, I got what I was looking for from this thread. I definitely have a better understanding how and why people feel the way they do.
I put a fair amount of energy into the early parts of this thread so I'm not sure how much more I want to spend on catching up. If I vanish, don't be surprised. Thanks everyone for your opinions, especially those who could disagree civility.
Up until now, I've never understood anti-label mentality. Labels are useful. They are shorthand when longhand won't do. But it turns out people will read more into your words if you label yourself "inappropriately". Had I expressed my ideas without the using "feminist" I probably wouldn't have reaped as much disappointment, been called a bigot, or been accused of secretly hating men. It's possible some people will never respect me again.
Live and learn.
Know thine audience. I discussed money and power because they are easier to quantify. I can quote statistics on CEO gender ratios but there is no metric unit for likability. In this forum, how for do you think I'd get trying to convince peope that women, on average, are "less liked"?
Sorry to further disappoint you. I am being honest.
I'll admit surprise and disappointment on my end too, Conspi. It seems I've lost some of your respect for espousing what I consider to be rather bland ideas in this thread:
1. Gender stereotypes damage everyone.
2. On average, women are measurably deficient in money and power when compared to men. (This in no way negates or diminishes the suffering of men in other areas like child custody.)
3. Everyone should fight to stop gender-based inequality.
No one has disagreed with me on 1 or 3. Some reasonable people questioned the accuracy of #2. I gave examples of how gender ratios are out of balance in government, business, and the media and then went away for the weekend. I am still willing to discuss the topic.
Sadly, most of the criticism was indirect. Several people people suggested I had a secret agenda, masked my hatred for men, and was only trying to get laid. There really isn't anything I can say to counter that sort of attack because I cannot prove a negative. I can only restate that I am hiding nothing.
The question remains why men and women choose as they do. I'm looking for an explanation.
Because we want to.
Otherwise you are perpetuating the myth of vicitimization which is necessary for feminism to support their beliefs.
The reason feminism got such a backlash in the first place was because of so many people assuming that if women could choose otherwise they would. When they opportunities were presented and SOME women continued to choose the same thing people were flabbergasted and then started creating NEW reasons for women to have chosen the way they did.
They are brainwashed
or
It's a cultural meme
or
It's a cultural hegemony
or
Learned helplessness
or whatever.
Not all people care about making so much money. I don't. Money does not impress me at all. As the owner of my own business I have the choice of receiving MORE MONEY but having to deal with people I don't want to deal with. My personal stress and ease of lifestyle matter more to me than money. Others may have a stronger threshhold.
But to assume that money is an indicator of anything other than money is ridiculous.
Actually I just looked into matter more closely and you seem to have made a false claim that confused us both. I don't think there is a NPFA standard like you said and it sure as hell isn't the CPAT test you posted a link for. That's a fire fighter academy entrance test and not what is actually required to actually be a firefighter. People who can only do what is required in the CPAT test will wash out of academy training.Quite the cynical conclusion. Did it ever dawn on you that the requirements were simply standardized and lifting a 165lb dead weight was determined not to distinguish a qualified firefighter?
One interpretation of this is the requirement was unnecessarily blocking women from a job they were essentially qualified for. You could have a job requirement: penis required. But unless it was a position of male porn star, it doesn't mean the requirement was valid.
You just took the conversation down a misleading path by presenting false standards. New York and LA despite having extensive programs trying to recruit more female fire fighters still have almost none due to lack of female interest combined with women being much more likely to fail the physicals.Like I said ...
And herein lies the sexism. Some women make excellent firefighters. Some are well qualified. Is there any evidence firefighters are less effective with the new standard? Have lives been lost due to changed physical requirements?
Do you actually know what Steinem said about firefighting?Is it beyond your belief that Steinem was right?
Actually most fire departments have kept the kind of standards I talked about and your posts were very misleading on this topic.Women today are still firefighters in very low numbers and without giving them a different set of physical standards that will continue to be the case.Again, you argue for the discrimination based on "it used to be that way" and not based on evidence that how it used to be was necessary. Is there evidence this change had an impact on the professional outcome? Or does it appear now that the requirement was indeed unnecessary?
No, I know the history. My sentiments are based upon specific knowledge, yours are based upon stereotypical assumptions. Do have any idea of what the specifics of the SFFD affirmative program were? sure doesn't seem like it. So how in the world could you know what my sentiments are neglecting to consider?Sentiment against affirmative action neglects consideration of the problem affirmative action was needed to address.
I have specifically described a situation with my fire department where the women were not equally qualified and given the job anyways.It's a one sided argument just like arguing for equal numbers (which is a straw man because I think it depends on the profession what the natural ratio should be). An argument needs to consider both sides of the coin at the same time.
The man, or the white male who fails to get the job because an equally qualified woman or minority had a hiring preference is no different than the thousands of women and minorities that failed to get the jobs because an equally qualified white male had a hiring preference.
Explain to me what sexism is and why it is wrong and I may be able to resolve the stalemate.However, in the case of the white male currently (or recently) it is necessary to restore proper balance. In the case of the women and minorities originally, it was necessary to maintain the status quo.
There are two ways to view affirmative action: one, it is more a necessary evil or, two, it is more an unfair practice. It comes down to point of view. There is no evidence one can base the argument on. Stalemate.
I didn't distort anything. Read what you wrote again that I was replying to:You are trying very hard to redefine what I actually said and believe. Your revision is a distortion. It is diversity that is the benefit. All individuals are going to vary in skills ideally with everyone meeting the minimum standard.
http://www.internationalskeptics.com/forums/showpost.php?p=8014458&postcount=238The NFPA standards for firefighters, which to my knowledge most departments in the US follow, does not have any different standards for men and women when it comes to physical strength or performance. I suspect it is the same with police.
However, physical strength is not the only asset an individual might bring to either profession and women can do a number of things better than men in many situations. They can often diffuse a hostile person or comfort a child or search a female suspect in ways men cannot always do.
If you think for sexual orientation and religion just making sure those things be not considered in the application process is enough why is that different then race and gender? This is very serious point because there was a very easy path to nondiscriminatory hiring (and promotion) practices available but it was not utilized.It's a judgement call, not an evidence based decision. With religion and sexual orientation chances are you just need to make sure those things are not considered in the applicant evaluation and affirmative action isn't needed. With affirmative action sometimes it is needed to break down some old boy barriers. Just eliminating the discrimination does not do enough to correct an identified problem.
Affirmative action supporters should have been doing this thirty years ago.The need for and use of affirmative action should be reassessed on a regular basis. This is the one thing I think hasn't occurred.
You were the one insisting there are things women do better then men.I don't understand the relevance of this comment.