Women care for and help household members 2.08 more hours per day than men in the most extreme case presented by Table 8A, but men work 6.43 hours more per day than women.
@RyanWokeFather@Oneiorosgrip@thedreamjunkie@PerhapsABot@ElocinTrail@BLS_gov@pewresearch Similarly, comparing the men from Table 8B to the women from Table 8C (where the youngest child is under 6), women do household activities for 1.91 more hours per day than men in the most extreme case presented by Table 8A, but, again, men work 6.43 hours more per day than women.
@RyanWokeFather@Oneiorosgrip@thedreamjunkie@PerhapsABot@ElocinTrail@BLS_gov@pewresearch Maybe women are forced to stay home with their kids and that causes the gap. If true, women with no kids should be working the same amount as men in the workforce as there is no reason not to since there is no reason to be on call and no extra household or child care duties.
@RyanWokeFather@Oneiorosgrip@thedreamjunkie@PerhapsABot@ElocinTrail@BLS_gov@pewresearch Whether you consider all currently childless folks (Table 8A) or just the ones working (Table 8B), women spend less time on paid labor and related activities and women spend less time working considering both unpaid domestic labor and paid labor added together. The pattern holds.
@LexyTopping writes "[m]en should work less and their employers and the government should help them to do so in order to close the gender pay gap" (google.com/amp/s/amp.theg…).
Let's check the data to see how privileged men are.
You may find that it's women who aren't "allowing [men] to express their experiences without trying to shout over them" (archive.ph/wexCf).
@jackruamusic Consider “The Sexual Victimization of Men in America: New Data Challenge Old Assumptions” by feminist Lara Stemple and epidemiologist Ilan H. Meyer published in 2014 in the _American Journal of Public Health_, volume 104, issue 6, on pages e19–e26 (ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/P…).
@jackruamusic "[F]ederal surveys detect a high prevalence of sexual victimization among men—in many circumstances similar to the prevalence found among women."
@HolstaT There are academic studies that don't support your contention, @HolstaT, that "the vast majority of domestic violence is committed by men towards women" (archive.ph/k3yNE), but rather suggest that women abuse more than men.
Let's look at those studies, shall we?
@HolstaT With physical aggression, "studies consistently find that as many women self-report perpetrating this behavior as do men; some studies find a higher prevalence of physical aggression committed by women" (ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/P…, p. 2), but only a minority of women are arrested.
@HolstaT Notes @TheJusticeDept: "[w]ife defendants had a lower conviction rate than husband defendants…. Of the 222 wife defendants, 70% were convicted of killing their mate. By contrast, of the 318 husband defendants, 87% were convicted of spouse murder" (bjs.gov/content/pub/pd…, p. 2).
@Firebird_psych@Gaea56998567@SimoneMesk@claudius_cruz@sarah__lenard@bairdjulia@smh@theage "Research showing that women commit high rates of intimate partner violence … against men has been controversial because [intimate partner violence] is typically framed as caused by the patriarchal construction of society and men’s domination over women" (Supra, p. 36).
@TheMightyV24@GretaAurora@SeagerMJ You cite _Half the Sky: Turning Oppression into Opportunity for Women Worldwide_. The figures in that work of "[w]omen and girls are killed specifically because of their gender." includes sex-selective abortion (nytimes.com/2009/09/08/boo…).
@TheMightyV24@GretaAurora@SeagerMJ There is a compelling reason for those sex-selective abortions: survival of the parents in old age. Boys are future Social Security cheques.
“The Chinese traditionally have valued sons over daughters, depending on their sons to support them in old age” (jstor.org/stable/189961?…).
@TheMightyV24@GretaAurora@SeagerMJ “Sons are permanent members of their natal families and retain life-time contractual relationships with their parents. Throughout their lives, they are expected to contribute to the economic well-being of their parents” (ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/P…).