Jenspm wrote:
Shahter wrote:
Jenspm wrote:
They aren't looked at, because they aren't relevant. It doesn't matter if women's average IQ is higher or lower than men, just like it doesn't matter if Russians, on average, are dumber than Americans, or if people from the south are smarter than people from the north, or if people with houses facing the sun tend to be brighter than people with houses in the shade.
People should be looked at as individuals, not as a part of some arbitrary group.
orly? when the statistics of OP have been collected and analyzed have individual traits - which, btw, are heavily dependent on biological specifics - of every person been taken into account?
It's a statistical analysis, made to prove that within the same job women and men are paid the same..
but,
statistically, they shouldn't be paid the same - that's my point. men are
statistically - surprise! - better suited for a lot of jobs then women, because - surprise! - men are
statistically smarter, stronger, faster and certainly a lot less burdened by certain... ehm... women's gender specifics. men and women
performing similarly within the same job should be paid the same - that's what i would agree with, but OP, imo, definitely haven't done enough research into that.
My point is that a) women are pressed into 'female' jobs which often pay less, b) we cannot look away from the possibility that female-dominated jobs are underpaid compared to male-dominated jobs, and c) it's more difficult for a woman to get into a seat of power than men ie. glass ceiling
All of the above are due to discrimination and judging women as a group of women rather than a group of individuals.
orly? "all of the above" may just as well be based on poor performance within certain jobs by women compared to men.
There is no reason why 'woman x' should be any worse a president than 'man y' just because "she's a woman"
no, there no reason she should be judged like that based on her gender. but we are talking statistics here, remember?
just like there's no reason why 'black man a' should be any worse than 'white man b' just "because he's black", yet there are many people who (sub-consciously or otherwise) think so.
there are certain distinctive
statistically proven racial characteristics for every race. should we judge every person based on that? no, absolutely not. but should we take those into account when conducting statistical research?
if you open your mind too much your brain will fall out.