@StevenTrustrum@FASDisDV@notlloomer80@Oneiorosgrip The problem is that (on average) women get educated in less technical fields than men (which is why when the majority of graduates at every degree level are women, the majority of engineering majors are men) and (on average) women work less than men.
@StevenTrustrum@FASDisDV@notlloomer80@Oneiorosgrip "Many college [high-paying] majors … in tech and engineering are male[-]dominated, while [lower-paying] majors … in social sciences and liberal arts tend to be female-dominated, placing men in higher-paying career pathways, on average" (hbr.org/2017/04/women-…).
@StevenTrustrum@FASDisDV@notlloomer80@Oneiorosgrip "But other research shows that pay declines when women move into a field (like biology), and compensation rises as men take a field over (like computer programming). So even if more women move into high-paying college majors, the result may not" change (hbr.org/2017/04/women-…).
Could it be that women (on average) work fewer hours than men regardless of field making employing women a more expensive proposition on average (to make up for the time that those women are not working, which might necessitate hiring more workers)?
@StevenTrustrum@FASDisDV@notlloomer80@Oneiorosgrip@BLS_gov@pewresearch According to the @BLS_gov, "[o]n the days they worked, employed men worked 49 minutes more than employed women. … However, even among full-time workers (those usually working 35 hours or more per week), men worked more per day than women—8.4 hours, compared with 7.9 hours."
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.
@StevenTrustrum@FASDisDV@notlloomer80@Oneiorosgrip@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.
@StevenTrustrum@FASDisDV@notlloomer80@Oneiorosgrip@BLS_gov@pewresearch By comparing the men from Table 8B to the women from Table 8C (using the youngest child under 6 column), we see the situation where women are unemployed and spending the most time caring not only for the children but the whole family.
@StevenTrustrum@FASDisDV@notlloomer80@Oneiorosgrip@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.
@StevenTrustrum@FASDisDV@notlloomer80@Oneiorosgrip@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…).
Consent by action is sometimes called “implied consent.”
“Enthusiastic consent can be expressed verbally or through nonverbal cues, such as positive body language like smiling, maintaining eye contact, and nodding” (rainn.org/articles/what-…).
@lizawelsh77@Oneiorosgrip@NaughtUmi You claim expertise beyond the teaching power of your so-far alleged domestic violence survival experience.
Statistics allow one to see patterns that may be representative of the whole (presuming a certain widely accepted degree of significance is achieved) that anecdotes don’t.
@lizawelsh77@Oneiorosgrip@NaughtUmi 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).
@lizawelsh77@Oneiorosgrip@NaughtUmi@TheJusticeDept "An estimated 156 wives and 275 husbands were convicted of killing their spouse. Convicted wives were less likely than convicted husbands to be sentenced to prison, and convicted wives received shorter prison sentences than their male counterparts" (bjs.gov/content/pub/pd…, p 2).
Generally speaking, this is because we, as a society, created a specialized manager class from people who are educated to be bean counters but not educated enough to be bookkeepers, accountants, etc. This manager class isn’t educated in the craft they are managing.
They are not old masters or, necessarily, the original founding entrepreneur who did it all in the beginning. Even if it is the founding entrepreneur, there are some fields (like web design) which are too technical for the typical entrepreneur to even attempt to dabble in.
2/10
In order to address the aspects of the business in which the entrepreneur is incompetent that entrepreneur attempts to buy an expert in the field by hiring them.