Not to sound inflammatory but... do you actually do anything or is fighting to you the same as posting about it online?
Hey, sorry if you're not the one who really asked this question, but I just saw this quote and had to comment - the Pay Gap isn't actually a result of discrimination. Maybe four or five cents is (They haven't been able to figure it out) but for the most part it comes down the women choosing between their family and their career, and how that drags down the national average for women.lacktheknack said:The post he quoted asked:
Do you consider the pay gap, or the incidence of harassment and sexual assault to be of importance?
... which he entirely avoided answering.
I'm assuming he cares about these things a bit, like most pleasant people would, but just didn't think to answer.
Done by all sides everywhere.Twinrehz said:However, it does piss me off, to no small degree, when someone tries to reduce a person's standing by claiming the opinion is less relevant because it came from a woman. I can only reply to such statements with: So what? What difference does it make if it came from a man, a woman or an invertebrate? Even if the statement annoys you because it goes against what YOU believe in, there's no reason to start being unreasonable and attacking their person. It's not how discourse works, and if that's how you're going to react to it, then you have no place in the public room.
Source?Perhaps someone can explain to me why this "civilized" society keeps maintaining its old fashioned ideas of lesser worth because of gender?
A source that isn't some dudebro asshole or some facetious person?Why women are treated like nothing more than "cum-dumpsters", to be taken advantage of and cast aside once you're done? That since they're "lesser beings", their feelings are not worth considering?
Just out of interested: the data doesn't seem to be normalised for working hours/experience/training. Can you find anywhere if it is or not?Silvanus said:The Bureau of Labour Statistics also tracks earnings within job categories, rather than between them, and found a pay gap does exist [http://www.bls.gov/cps/cpsaat39.pdf].
So, it really doesn't seem as if differences in employment trends between the sexes actually accounts for the pay gap. There's significant evidence that it exists within job categories, and in the same professions.
Actually, Claudia Goldin's study (the 2rd link you posted and also the basis of the 1st article) pretty much explains it all:Silvanus said:Putting it down entirely to job differences seems just as reductionist as putting it down entirely to discrimination, doesn't it?Ihateregistering1 said:The point isn't whether it exists (pretty much all the authors agree it does) but why it exists. If you compare the salary of someone who works at McDonald's and someone who is a Petrochemical Engineer, even if they both work exactly 40 hours a week, there is going to be a significant "wage gap", but that doesn't mean the gap is morally wrong, unfair or the result of discrimination.
Likewise, as the articles and Dr. Farrell point out, the long-held use of the "wage gap" was to try and make the point of "women earn less money than men on average, therefore discrimination, sexism, patriarchy, etc.", when in fact numerous easily explainable and demonstrable factors show why and how the gap exists, and when factoring in the aforementioned reasons, any remaining effects that can be attributed (but almost never actually proven) to "discrimination" are, at best, extremely small.
A pretty good read about differences in pay within occupations can be found here [http://www.nytimes.com/2014/04/24/upshot/the-pay-gap-is-because-of-gender-not-jobs.html?_r=0]. More in-depth stuff is here [http://scholar.harvard.edu/files/goldin/files/goldin_aeapress_2014_1.pdf].
The Bureau of Labour Statistics also tracks earnings within job categories, rather than between them, and found a pay gap does exist [http://www.bls.gov/cps/cpsaat39.pdf].
So, it really doesn't seem as if differences in employment trends between the sexes actually accounts for the pay gap. There's significant evidence that it exists within job categories, and in the same professions.
It certainly looks like a factor, yes. It's notable, though, that while the wage gap is smaller for women who do not have children, it still exists [http://www2.econ.iastate.edu/classes/econ321/orazem/anderson_motherhood-penalty.pdf]. There's a better source I had on that point a while ago, and I'll post it once I've found it again.Ihateregistering1 said:Actually, Claudia Goldin's study (the 3rd link you posted and also the basis of the 2nd article) pretty much explains it all:
"What, then, is the cause of the remaining pay gap? Quite simply the gap exists because hours of work in many occupations are worth more when given at particular moments and when the hours are more continuous. That is, in many occupations earnings have a nonlinear relationship with respect to hours. A flexible schedule often comes at a high price, particularly in the corporate, financial, and legal worlds."
Men, on average, work longer hours than women, are more willing to have an inflexible schedule, and they are also significantly less likely to switch to part-time work (or drop out all together) when children are born, no matter what occupation they are in (hopefully you can read this link, but if not several articles above also explain much of the same, including Dr. Farrell's speech).
http://online.wsj.com/news/articles/SB10001424052702303592404577361883019414296
So in other words, even when you attempt to compare two people in the same occupation, you're still not comparing apples to apples. A male lawyer who is willing to work 80 hours a week with an inflexible schedule will not only obviously make more overall than a female lawyer who only works 40 and wants a flexible schedule, he's more likely to get promoted faster and get raises as well, thus leading to more average earnings.
Now, one could argue that the fact that women are more likely to drop out of the workforce or go part-time is the result of sexism and women expecting to maintain "traditional roles", and that would be a very legit point, but that is very different than out and out discrimination.
You cannot control the reactions with sheer belief. The point is that whatever thoughts you have are already the results of atomic reactions. There can be a perceived feedback loop, but if you think about it, even the actions taken to manipulate brain chemistry are already pre-determined by atomic attraction and subsequent reactions, by their very nature.erttheking said:Actually I ran this past a friend of mine who is good with science and he said that when it comes to this stuff and how the brain works, atoms don't matter at all. It all comes down to chemical reactions. I'm just gonna post what he said.Directionless said:Snip
We can control the reactions by sheer belief, based primarily on physical actions associated with the belief, what we eat, where we are, who is around us, and if you want to put things in your intense, deep nerve stimulation technologies, the last of which directly influences how parts of the brain perform.
You can argue that the inherent reactions in our brain will determine if we will react in chemistry-changing ways, and how we change that chemistry based on outside input, but that's chaos theory, and proving that will take considerable effort.
I've actually heard the opposite: at least in their 20's, women without kids actually earn MORE (on average) than men without kids:Silvanus said:It certainly looks like a factor, yes. It's notable, though, that while the wage gap is smaller for women who do not have children, it still exists [http://www2.econ.iastate.edu/classes/econ321/orazem/anderson_motherhood-penalty.pdf]. There's a better source I had on that point a while ago, and I'll post it once I've found it again.
I honestly think the problem is the complete opposite: I think people are far too willing to believe anything they're told just so long as it matches up with their perception of "how the world is".Silvanus said:It often seems to me that people are willing to reach pretty far to believe a problem doesn't exist.
Well, it's claim against claim. For what it's worth, that Farrell article seems pretty perfunctory, short, and uncited.Ihateregistering1 said:I've actually heard the opposite: at least in their 20's, women without kids actually earn MORE (on average) than men without kids:
http://www.forbes.com/2006/05/12/women-wage-gap-cx_wf_0512earningmore.html
People almost always tend to assume guilt in publicised criminal proceedings; it's not unique to cases that fit that particular narrative.Ihateregistering1 said:I honestly think the problem is the complete opposite: I think people are far too willing to believe anything they're told just so long as it matches up with their perception of "how the world is".
To give a perfect example, look at the Duke Lacrosse rape scandal (Wikipedia it if unfamiliar). In a nutshell, three white lacrosse players at Duke University (a very prestigious and "preppy" school) were accused of raping a poor black stripper. Immediately it dominated the airwaves, and many people had basically already decided long before any evidence came out that they were guilty. Why? Why no presumption of innocence in this particular case?
In my opinion, it's because those people wanted it to be true, because it so perfectly fit their perception of "how the world is". 3 rich, white, probably right-wing kids taking advantage of a poor black woman and thinking they'd get away with it thanks to them being rich and having "white male privilege"? You couldn't write propaganda this perfect if you tried.
So people wanted it to be true, and therefore they didn't bother to check facts or wait for evidence or anything, they just needed vindication to know that their worldview was correct. And to me, this is why people so often swallow anything they're told without bothering to check on it.
Silvanus said:Farrell has written several books on the subject, recommended reading. I especially like him because, as I've noted, he's an ardent feminist (the only man in history elected to be the NOW President 3 times) and was once a true believer in the "wage gap".Ihateregistering1 said:SNIP
Ok, to give another example(s): the anti-GMO movement, as well as the anti-vaccine movement. Despite the fact that there's barely a shred of evidence that GMO foods are worse for you than non-GMO foods, or that vaccines cause autism, people have jumped on the "GMOs and vaccines are bad" bandwagon like it's going out of style. Why?
In my opinion, because it fits their worldview. "GMOs and vaccines are made by corporations, and corporations are evil, therefore GMOs and vaccines must be evil", and thus people immediately subscribe to that belief without asking difficult questions or bothering to do any research.
That's a pretty interesting question, I'd agree.Ihateregistering1 said:Ok, to give another example(s): the anti-GMO movement, as well as the anti-vaccine movement. Despite the fact that there's barely a shred of evidence that GMO foods are worse for you than non-GMO foods, or that vaccines cause autism, people have jumped on the "GMOs and vaccines are bad" bandwagon like it's going out of style. Why?