Soldato
- Joined
- 12 Sep 2012
- Posts
- 11,698
- Location
- Surrey
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This
This
Did you even read what I said?.There are many female dominated industries, why don't we see men being promoted in to female dominated industries, when they obviously face the same social pressures against becoming a nurse or nanny or preschool teacher. This idea that women need to be pushed in to male dominated industries because equality is extremely gynocentric and inequality.
This would help & you are correct, it's likely something which can't be changed overnight.Here's an idea. How about they stop telling girls they should do 'girly' jobs and stop telling men they have to do 'manly' jobs. I work for an engineering company and at my site 12 out of 500 of our engineers are women. A similar percentage applies in HR except it's flipped. Why? Women aren't attracted to STEM subjects, why? I don't know but clearly it's something to do with what society expects of women.
Get rid of all the stigma and compare it again in 100 years after it's had time to take effect.
Did you even read what I said?.
2. Encouragement for both men & women to not be put off certain professions by gender stereotypes.
This again, it's not highly controversial - pre-existing biases & pressures to avoid or go into certain professions should be broken down & people encouraged to work in whatever field they can excel at.
This would help & you are correct, it's likely something which can't be changed overnight.
Not in E&W they're not. It's the same standard for both male and female officers.
The quality of education is closely associated with better earnings later in life yet women tend to make less than men, despite generally being better students. Girls tend to read more and do more homework and have higher grades yet when they enter the workforce all that effort somehow doesn't translate into higher earnings, despite it doing so when comparing boys with other boys.
It's a cultural problem and we need to fix it as soon as possible because it is a drain on overall productivity.
A hilariously, embarrassingly, shockingly low standard for both. Brilliant.
Nothing is stopping anyone getting into careers. i.e Females into engineering or males becoming beauticians. It's peoples interests. Why do you need more males to be interested in beauty? Why do you need more females to be interested in engineering?
Because engineers can expect to earn several multiples of what a beauticians can expect to earn?
And there's often plenty of obstacles to women becoming engineers. I know several (and several more who've quit) who have some absolute horror stories. They find colleagues don't respect them, don't listen to them and male-dominated companies often don't take sexual harassment seriously. One of them was even sexually harassed on a graduate training scheme by one of the people running the scheme!
I'd also hope that men wanting to get into beauty wouldn't face similar obstacles or stigma.
That sounds like a good way to get around this problem of productivity gender politics. People moaning about not getting paid the same as men are not advocating for a system based on merit like that.
Your first sentence or question or whatever it was made no sense to what I wrote. You suggesting earning potential is stopping people from going into a certain careers because it's less lucrative? That's not a barrier to a career, that's a choice someone makes. People are not stopped from becoming beauticians just because engineers earn more?
You know several who were stopped from becoming engineers? Like told they can't become engineers?
Anyways it's all a moot point imo. World doesn't NEED more female engineers, it doesn't NEED more male beauticians. No industry NEEDS more of one sex.
What I'm saying is that engineers, on average, earn significantly more the beauticians.
No, they became engineers but quit through frustration with the sexism in the industry. Do you know that it's still pretty common in the states for tech start-ups to have group outing at strips clubs? As a woman you can either go and feel uncomfortable or miss out on a bonding experience. Tough call.
If you want to run a successful business, you need to design your products for a wide audience. If your workforce has little in the way of diversity, you're going to struggle to capture the maximum possible audience. For example, Apple made a health app that didn't track the one thing that women want to track more than anything else. How do you think that happened? I'm sure a male beautician could give better advice to male customers based on their own experiences too.
Smart companies, like Apple, are doing more to hire people from different backgrounds.
My point is that you don't know what you're talking about.
That woman have less strength/endurance than men?
Wat?