Mouri Kogoro said:
The whole point in my last post is that it's a choice they're
encouraged to make, pushed to make. Fathers, meanwhile, are not encouraged to drop from the workforce, though their children need them just as much.
therefore there will always be an absolute wage gap.
Except the wage gap appears for most women even before they quit to raise children (thus making the gap even larger), in nearly every profession. I was careful to address this argument in my big post. Did you simply not read all of it?
Women make different life choices than men not because of patriarchy but because of biology
You're completely ignoring nurture and culture here.
Again, it used to be common knowledge that women were, by nature, too weak willed and emotional to accept any
social responsibilities outside of childcare (voting, authority over men, etc.)
It used to be common knowledge that blacks were biologically simple minded and childlike, subservient by nature. They're happiest when they're working hard, with whites to lead them. People were so certain of this they went to war for it.
Where did these self-evident biological truths go? In the trash bin, because when the culture changed, the people changed too. Funny that.
And its happening again. Even today, it's widely accepted that women just don't have heads for math or engineering. They're usually softer, more nurturing, less logical then men. Right? But as I noted, even scientists who agree with you have been compelled by the data to accept that the gap in that regard is narrowing and will probably disappear. Has there been a biological change among females? Of course not. It's now more culturally acceptable and desirable for a woman to be good at math.
Likewise, as Lightknight notes, women outnumber men in teaching, childcare, and social work. Is this purely because men choose not to do those things? Or does the fact that they're disfavored in those positions, which are culturally seen as "womanly" have something to do with it? What about the fact that men who are interested in caring for children tend to be seen as pedophiles? Is that a biological fact too? How about the recent rise in single fathers? Does that mean men are biologically changing?
Biology plays a role, certainly. There are tendencies. But culture is every bit as powerful a mover too, and conflating ones culture to fundamental biological imperatives is a dangerous and arrogant thing to do. This is especially true when we still have powerful cultural forces telling both genders what their places are (traditional values, anyone?). Why would such forces be necessary if it was purely biological instinct?
But I guess foisting it all off on fundamental biology is a good way to shut down the conversation, huh? Can't have pesky discussions about change or reform if change is biologically impossible.