Lootifer wrote:femnazis
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PLAYER57832 wrote:On the other hand, creating such an environment would likely be very repressive.
PLAYER57832 wrote:The key is educational access.
natty dread wrote:huamulan wrote:
And still, you are yet to provide any evidence whatsoever that women have a harder time negotiating than men.natty dread wrote:PLAYER57832 wrote:aying "women don't negotiate" is one of the arguments being thrown out a lot today.
It's also been shown false
http://www.washingtonpost.com/national/ ... ingtonpostOur recent Catalyst report, The Myth of the Ideal Worker , reveals that women do ask for raises and promotions. They just donāt get as much in return.
The research focused on career paths of high-potential men and women, drawing on thousands of MBA graduates from top schools around the world. Catalyst found that, among those who had moved on from their first post-MBA job, there was no significant difference in the proportion of women and men who asked for increased compensation or a higher position.
Yet the rewards were different.
Women who initiated such conversations and changed jobs post MBA experienced slower compensation growth than the women who stayed put. For men, on the other hand, it paid off to change jobs and negotiate for higher salariesāthey earned more than men who stayed did. And we saw that as both menās and womenās careers progress, the gender gap in level and pay gets even wider.














natty dread wrote:Lootifer wrote:femnazis








Lootifer wrote:natty dread wrote:bedub1 wrote:Of course men make more than women. There is nothing wrong with this situation.
Take off that phatscotty hat bro, it doesnt suit ya.
If you dig into the context beyond what he is saying he can still say it while being consistent with what I said above:
Currently femnazis will tell you that men make 25% (or whatever) more than woman; but only a small fraction of this difference is because of discrimination.
Most of it will be made up by woman doing different (and more often than not lower paying) jobs than men. No discrimination; you just dont pay a nurse the same you pay a doctor.
Now are there some inherent failure in society where we push woman into nursing school, but men into medical school? Maybe; but that is certainly making good progress as society breaks down old fashioned attitudes.

















Lootifer wrote:And jesus Sym, sort ur shit out. Now I think I know how BBS feels when PS goes to bat for libertarian ideals.
Lootifer wrote:Because history shows that we can be rather discriminatory when left to our own devices.

















Symmetry wrote:thegreekdog wrote:Okay, seriously? I didn't even address you original reply in my post. Why are you hanging on to it? I thought we'd moved on. The government has employees... great, wonderful, grand. Let's move on (again)... there is literally no point in debating something that is universally acknowledged as true.Symmetry wrote:As to private employers, government should clearly have a say as a point of principle. The level of governmental interference is clearly up for debate, but ruling out any form of governmental interference is at best wrong, and at worst dangerous.
Why? What do you mean by a point of principle?
Also, for purposes of this discussion, I'm assuming all federal, state, and local laws government workplace discrimination with respect to gender are valid. Therefore, we're only talking about new laws or regulations.
As a point of principle, that people should earn the same level of pay if they do the same job. And that the government is a major employer. Indeed, to take it further, few so called "private" companies are separate from the government in any meaningful sense.
I sense that you want me to explain the flaws in your received arguments before you attempt to explain the logic behind what you've been told is true.




















BigBallinStalin wrote:
in general, which institution creates longer lasting and more beneficial change regarding discrimination:
a) political institutions
b) economic institutions
c) social institutions






















natty dread wrote:Lootifer wrote: demogogue




















BigBallinStalin wrote:Lootifer wrote:And jesus Sym, sort ur shit out. Now I think I know how BBS feels when PS goes to bat for libertarian ideals.
It's awesome, isn't it? Feels fuckin' fantastic to have your ideology recklessly whipped to death.Lootifer wrote:Because history shows that we can be rather discriminatory when left to our own devices.
Big question for the big guy:
in general, which institution creates longer lasting and more beneficial change regarding discrimination:
a) political institutions
b) economic institutions
c) social institutions























BigBallinStalin wrote:Big question for the big guy:
in general, which institution creates longer lasting and more beneficial change regarding discrimination:
a) political institutions
b) economic institutions
c) social institutions








Lootifer wrote:natty dread wrote:bedub1 wrote:Of course men make more than women. There is nothing wrong with this situation.
Take off that phatscotty hat bro, it doesnt suit ya.
If you dig into the context beyond what he is saying he can still say it while being consistent with what I said above:
Currently femnazis will tell you that men make 25% (or whatever) more than woman; but only a small fraction of this difference is because of discrimination.
Most of it will be made up by woman doing different (and more often than not lower paying) jobs than men. No discrimination; you just dont pay a nurse the same you pay a doctor.
Lootifer wrote: Now are there some inherent failure in society where we push woman into nursing school, but men into medical school? Maybe; but that is certainly making good progress as society breaks down old fashioned attitudes.
















huamulan wrote:PLAYER, I am STILL waiting for your proof that CEOs have greater capacity to successfully negotiate their salary/benefits upwards than people who work in other jobs. As it stands, my anecdote beats your totally unfounded assumption.
All of which are things that many would call oppressive. Sweden is not the paradise you seem to imply. I like Sweden, but part of what makes it work is its cultural homogeneity.huamulan wrote:Since then you have also said:PLAYER57832 wrote:On the other hand, creating such an environment would likely be very repressive.
Creating that environment does not have to be oppressive in any way. I think I mentioned earlier that Sweden has achieved almost total gender-equality in employment (even for mothers). The two main factors that helped create this situation were:
- a welfare regime that assumes total equality. Individuals are taxed and assisted in light of their status as a Swedish citizen, not in light of their status as a mother/father, woman/man, spouse/singleton etc.
- a gender-neutral system of paid parental leave. A lot of countries legislate a generous amount of paid maternity leave but little paid paternity or parental leave. Sweden gives the mother and father the exact same entitlements.
The state doesn't have to lean on anyone or force employers down a certain path. All it has to do is treat women the same way as it treats men - this then encourages a gender-neutral mindset amongst the general population.
huamulan wrote:PLAYER57832 wrote:The key is educational access.
Which women have in abundance in the West. In most Western countries girls outdo boys at all higher levels of education and plain outnumber them at university-level.
















huamulan wrote:natty: Maybe men primarily switch jobs for a higher salary while women primarily switch jobs for other reasons.
Who's to say otherwise?
















PLAYER57832 wrote:Just look at the variation in CEO pay
huamulan wrote:Changes beneficial to discrimination? Apartheid in South Africa weathered economic sanctions due to the power of social and political backing, so I guess society and politics were the institutions most capable of creating long-lasting discrimination.
You may be using the term 'beneficial' to refer to the removal of discrimination, but you have to ask whether the benefit is universal.


































huamulan wrote:PLAYER57832 wrote:Just look at the variation in CEO pay
Allah wept. You have got to be kidding me. What, you think the CEO of Coca Cola and the CEO of a local Sri Lankan furniture-making firm will have the same salary just because they are both CEOs? Or at the other end of the scale: you think the CEO of Goldman Sachs pays his maid the same as a small town solicitor pays his maid? Hint: different companies pay their employees different amounts.
Now what I said at all.huamulan wrote:
I'd love to know why you think it is 'oppressive' to give women and men equal entitlement to paid parental leave.
First, you are factually incorrect. Women with equal education/experience make less in the same jobs than men.huamulan wrote:
If women earn less than men despite having the same level of education then that would suggest that educational access is not the key.
















PLAYER57832 wrote:huamulan wrote:Creating that environment does not have to be oppressive in any way. I think I mentioned earlier that Sweden has achieved almost total gender-equality in employment (even for mothers). The two main factors that helped create this situation were:
- a welfare regime that assumes total equality. Individuals are taxed and assisted in light of their status as a Swedish citizen, not in light of their status as a mother/father, woman/man, spouse/singleton etc.
- a gender-neutral system of paid parental leave. A lot of countries legislate a generous amount of paid maternity leave but little paid paternity or parental leave. Sweden gives the mother and father the exact same entitlements.
The state doesn't have to lean on anyone or force employers down a certain path. All it has to do is treat women the same way as it treats men - this then encourages a gender-neutral mindset amongst the general population.
All of which are things that many would call oppressive. Sweden is not the paradise you seem to imply.
Try actually reading before responding instead of looking for affirmation of your pre-determined assumptions.huamulan wrote:How sad for you. I think that 'oppressive' is exactly what you called those measures.
















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