BigBallinStalin wrote:PLAYER57832 wrote:saxitoxin wrote:I don't know what to tell you other than your personal experience doesn't constitute a trend.
No, in this case , while I did provide a personal example to illustrate what I am saying, but that was not the basis for what I was saying. Looks like I am going to have to dig up those article after all. One was in Forbes, I believe. Trouble is, I won't have the time for a few days and something tells me this topic will be buried by then.
Therefore, your personal example is irrelevant?
No, its not the data upon which the statement is based. It IS an illustration of how this stuff happens, how the data came to be as it is.
Look, saying that women don't ask for more pay is just too simplistic, and is somewhat "blaming the victim". It can be roughly true when the "rubber hits the road" .. that is, in an interview, etc. However, why is that true? That is part of what I was trying to get at. Its not a simple answer. A lot of it IS, as I said earlier, that women, not just in the workplace, but throughout their lives, learn very early that to buck the guys leads to trouble. A boy who acts out is not reprimanded the way a girl is (boys are reprimanded more than boys, but are allowed to act out more before they are taken to task), etc, etc.
Maybe saying Janitor versus CEO was a poor choice. For one thing, most janitorial jobs are now contracted out and therefore are, to a point, negotiated. However, the vast majority of people get jobs with set salaries and benefits. The lower down the ranks you go, the more true that is. Negotiation is a luxury for some.
That women make less than men, that its not simply because they want fewer hours or the many other excuses provided above has been reported and discussed so widely it is no longer something needing a citation. Even so, here you go:
(I have picked articles that don't just report figures, but attempt to get at why they are as they are).
(From Time Magazine)
http://www.time.com/time/nation/article ... 85,00.htmlhttp://www.usatoday.com/money/workplace ... nder_N.htma few other links were provided above.
But, its much easier to just claim any woman not getting a job is just incompetent, chose a "mommy track", etc....