@LarissaNeubaur @SociologyThe @anon95123 @SexyIsntSexist @PhilMitchell83 @drwarrenfarrell If you add up both the unpaid labor and paid labor, on average, men work more total time than women creating a #GenderedLaborGap pursuant to (as an example) the @BLS_gov's 2017 American Time Use Survey (bls.gov/news.release/a…) and @pewresearch's data (pewresearch.org/fact-tank/2018…).
@LarissaNeubaur @SociologyThe @anon95123 @SexyIsntSexist @PhilMitchell83 @drwarrenfarrell @BLS_gov @pewresearch American Time Use Survey (with 2017 as an example) shows that women on average are not spending enough more time with their kids, doing chores, or anything else to explain women's lack of time working.

On average, men just work more in America (considering both paid and unpaid).
@LarissaNeubaur @SociologyThe @anon95123 @SexyIsntSexist @PhilMitchell83 @drwarrenfarrell @BLS_gov @pewresearch Let's do the math:

Table 8A, column 1: Men: Women:
Household activities: 1.31 2.34
Caring for household: 1.01 1.85
Work-related activities: 5.46 3.37
==========
Total: 7.78 7.56
@LarissaNeubaur @SociologyThe @anon95123 @SexyIsntSexist @PhilMitchell83 @drwarrenfarrell @BLS_gov @pewresearch Now comparing the men from Table 8B to the women from Table 8C (where the youngest child is under 6):

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.
@LarissaNeubaur @SociologyThe @anon95123 @SexyIsntSexist @PhilMitchell83 @drwarrenfarrell @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.
@LarissaNeubaur @SociologyThe @anon95123 @SexyIsntSexist @PhilMitchell83 @drwarrenfarrell @BLS_gov @pewresearch Let's do the math: Men: Women:
Household activities: 1.26 3.17
Caring for household: 1.42 3.36
Work-related activities: 6.57 0.00
==========
Total: 9.25 6.53

Who is doing more?
@LarissaNeubaur @SociologyThe @anon95123 @SexyIsntSexist @PhilMitchell83 @drwarrenfarrell @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.
@LarissaNeubaur @SociologyThe @anon95123 @SexyIsntSexist @PhilMitchell83 @drwarrenfarrell @BLS_gov @pewresearch If women with kids are working fewer paid work hours due to the number of hours spent on childcare responsibilities, we should've seen women performing as many domestic labor hours as men were spending doing paid labor, but that isn't what we see.

We only see women working less.
@LarissaNeubaur @SociologyThe @anon95123 @SexyIsntSexist @PhilMitchell83 @drwarrenfarrell @BLS_gov @pewresearch Other @BLS_gov data (see below) indicates that 61% of families have both parents employed (bls.gov/opub/ted/2017/…), but does not indicate whether the mothers are working full-time or part-time.

The American Time Use Survey does have an answer in Table 8B.

Let's check that out.
@LarissaNeubaur @SociologyThe @anon95123 @SexyIsntSexist @PhilMitchell83 @drwarrenfarrell @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.
@LarissaNeubaur @SociologyThe @anon95123 @SexyIsntSexist @PhilMitchell83 @drwarrenfarrell @BLS_gov @pewresearch Let's do that math:

Table 8A, column 4: Men: Women:
Household activities: 1.54 2.21
Caring for household: 0.07 0.07
Work-related activities: 4.11 2.83
===========
Total: 5.72 5.11
@LarissaNeubaur @SociologyThe @anon95123 @SexyIsntSexist @PhilMitchell83 @drwarrenfarrell @BLS_gov @pewresearch Consider just workers:

Table 8B, column 4: Men: Women:
Household activities: 1.34 1.80
Caring for household: 0.04 0.05
Work-related activities: 6.17 5.29
===========
Total: 7.55 7.14
@LarissaNeubaur @SociologyThe @anon95123 @SexyIsntSexist @PhilMitchell83 @drwarrenfarrell @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.
@LarissaNeubaur @SociologyThe @anon95123 @SexyIsntSexist @PhilMitchell83 @drwarrenfarrell @BLS_gov @pewresearch Moreover, homemaking is not usually physically demanding work (unlike the paid labor many men do that women typically do not).

See, Women Workers and Women at Home Are Equally Inactive: NHANES 2003–2006 (available at ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/P…).
@LarissaNeubaur @SociologyThe @anon95123 @SexyIsntSexist @PhilMitchell83 @drwarrenfarrell @BLS_gov @pewresearch "Women spent most of their day in sedentary (~55%) and light (~32%) activity, with limited lifestyle (~11%) and moderate vigorous physical activity (MVPA) (~2%), and there were no differences between the homemakers and [employed women]" (ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/P…).
@LarissaNeubaur @SociologyThe @anon95123 @SexyIsntSexist @PhilMitchell83 @drwarrenfarrell @BLS_gov @pewresearch "Based on self-report, previous studies suggest that homemakers obtain less total physical activity, have lower overall activity-related energy expenditure, and are less likely to participate in vigorous leisure-time physical activity, than [employed women]" (Id.).
@LarissaNeubaur @SociologyThe @anon95123 @SexyIsntSexist @PhilMitchell83 @drwarrenfarrell @BLS_gov @pewresearch "A recent study conducted by the PEW Research Center found that stay-at-home mothers reported spending more time on childcare, housework, leisure activities, and sleep more than working mothers" (ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/P…).
@LarissaNeubaur @SociologyThe @anon95123 @SexyIsntSexist @PhilMitchell83 @drwarrenfarrell @BLS_gov @pewresearch Table 8A of the @BLS_gov’s 2019 American Time Use Survey (bls.gov/news.release/a…) demonstrates that this #GenderedLaborGap continues to be a problem. It is not just something that existed as a freak accident of statistics in 2017.
@LarissaNeubaur @SociologyThe @anon95123 @SexyIsntSexist @PhilMitchell83 @drwarrenfarrell @BLS_gov @pewresearch 2019:
Table 8A, column 1: Men: Women:
Household activities: 1.28 2.33
Caring for household: 0.95 1.80
Work-related activities: 5.72 3.35
==========
Total: 7.95 7.48
@LarissaNeubaur @SociologyThe @anon95123 @SexyIsntSexist @PhilMitchell83 @drwarrenfarrell @BLS_gov @pewresearch The paper you cite, @LarissaNeubaur, relies on the American Time Use Surveys.

As you can see from the American Time Use Surveys, @LarissaNeubaur, when you add up both the unpaid labor and paid labor, on average, men work more total time than women creating a #GenderedLaborGap.
@LarissaNeubaur @SociologyThe @anon95123 @SexyIsntSexist @PhilMitchell83 @drwarrenfarrell @BLS_gov @pewresearch Moreover, @LarissaNeubaur, your cited source does not seem to comment on whether "a man in the house on average produces more housework, than he does himself." The American Time Use Surveys upon which the paper you cite is based does not address that issue.
@LarissaNeubaur @SociologyThe @anon95123 @SexyIsntSexist @PhilMitchell83 @drwarrenfarrell @BLS_gov @pewresearch Well, @LarissaNeubaur, why are women on average incapable of taking on equal responsibilities and working as many hours as men (when both unpaid domestic work and paid work are considered)?

Per the @BLS_gov's American Time Use Survey, domestic duties aren't holding women back.

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More from @MSS3RosaFerreum

Feb 26
Read 9 tweets
Feb 24
@HERterus @cheomitII @Assayer92 @shanoawarrior @Oneiorosgrip @Lynnia00721169 @SpaghettiBadger @AmyNoMiddleNam3 @PickleMrs @saturdayobrien @JaneKn0wsBest @Krispi_Largo @JaePea02 @maxrenke @GanniTonya @melJsaysso @Kittie_Svengali @Mr5had0wX @M_DeWinter1844 @JohnathonDoeman @tabularasaTonyB @AliceTheGoon63 @ALReproRightsAd @Groucholiz @JazhuStreaming @SexDrugnRnR @FHousebunny @LustfulLiberal @nerdybirdyCH @numbersdelight @JustLaurenB @Judith_Char @threadreaderapp “During World War I, the number of women in industry increased greatly and the range of occupations open to them was extended, even though they remained concentrated in occupations such as domestic and personal service, clerical occupations, and factory work” (Id.).
Read 11 tweets
Feb 24
@Alexand59482200 Women have to be willing to do equal work. Statistically, most women do not do equal work. This must change if there is to be the equality of which you speak.

Let's look at the data!
@Alexand59482200 If you add up both the unpaid labor and paid labor, on average, men work more total time than women creating a #GenderedLaborGap pursuant to (as an example) the @BLS_gov's 2017 American Time Use Survey (bls.gov/news.release/a…) and @pewresearch's data (pewresearch.org/fact-tank/2018…).
@Alexand59482200 @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."
Read 32 tweets
Feb 23
@shanoawarrior @Assayer92 @cheomitII @Oneiorosgrip @HERterus @Lynnia00721169 @SpaghettiBadger @AmyNoMiddleNam3 @PickleMrs @saturdayobrien @JaneKn0wsBest @Krispi_Largo @JaePea02 @maxrenke @GanniTonya @melJsaysso @Kittie_Svengali @Mr5had0wX @M_DeWinter1844 @JohnathonDoeman @tabularasaTonyB @AliceTheGoon63 @ALReproRightsAd @Groucholiz @JazhuStreaming @SexDrugnRnR @FHousebunny @LustfulLiberal @nerdybirdyCH @numbersdelight @JustLaurenB @Judith_Char Anti child support isn’t anti woman. When courts only awarded custody of children to fathers upon divorce or other martial separation, there was no child support and the custodial parent was responsible to independently support the child or children in that parent’s custody.
@shanoawarrior @Assayer92 @cheomitII @Oneiorosgrip @HERterus @Lynnia00721169 @SpaghettiBadger @AmyNoMiddleNam3 @PickleMrs @saturdayobrien @JaneKn0wsBest @Krispi_Largo @JaePea02 @maxrenke @GanniTonya @melJsaysso @Kittie_Svengali @Mr5had0wX @M_DeWinter1844 @JohnathonDoeman @tabularasaTonyB @AliceTheGoon63 @ALReproRightsAd @Groucholiz @JazhuStreaming @SexDrugnRnR @FHousebunny @LustfulLiberal @nerdybirdyCH @numbersdelight @JustLaurenB @Judith_Char All y’all think women are children and inferior to all men (and even post-pubescent minor-aged boys) as you think mothers need child support payments and are incapable of raising children without such support as if being female was some kind of inherent disability. Sad.
Read 16 tweets
Dec 31, 2021
@ALReproRightsAd @tabularasaTonyB @JohnathonDoeman @melJsaysso @shanoawarrior @Groucholiz @JazhuStreaming @SexDrugnRnR @Oneiorosgrip @FHousebunny @LustfulLiberal @nerdybirdyCH @numbersdelight @JustLaurenB @Judith_Char How can a man choose to become a father? The answer is: he can’t. Parenthood is a decision that rests solely with women. Why should the consequences of that decision be laid at the feet of anyone other than the person who made that decision?
@ALReproRightsAd @tabularasaTonyB @JohnathonDoeman @melJsaysso @shanoawarrior @Groucholiz @JazhuStreaming @SexDrugnRnR @Oneiorosgrip @FHousebunny @LustfulLiberal @nerdybirdyCH @numbersdelight @JustLaurenB @Judith_Char Women have all the choices regarding parenthood. A woman can choose to be a parent if she finds a willing sperm donor. A man cannot choose to become a parent even if he finds a willing egg donor or a willing sex partner. She who has the womb has the choice of parenthood.
@ALReproRightsAd @tabularasaTonyB @JohnathonDoeman @melJsaysso @shanoawarrior @Groucholiz @JazhuStreaming @SexDrugnRnR @Oneiorosgrip @FHousebunny @LustfulLiberal @nerdybirdyCH @numbersdelight @JustLaurenB @Judith_Char If a woman terminates the pregnancy, she terminates the possibility of parenthood. If she carries the pregnancy to term, she puts the responsibilities of parenthood on the father whether that male wants to be a parent or not and whether he consented to sex or impregnation or not.
Read 47 tweets
Dec 26, 2021
@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.

These differences aggregate.
@StevenTrustrum @FASDisDV @notlloomer80 @Oneiorosgrip Women get the majority of higher education degrees and this is true at every degree level, but men dominate in the majors of business, engineering, mathematics, computer science, and physical and earth sciences (aei.org/carpe-diem/cha…; aei.org/carpe-diem/wom…).
@StevenTrustrum @FASDisDV @notlloomer80 @Oneiorosgrip "[Women] have been a majority of college-educated adults for more than a decade. Women first received more than half of the bachelor's degrees awarded in the 1981-82 academic year; today they earn about 57% of bachelor's degrees"(pewresearch.org/fact-tank/2019…; pewresearch.org/fact-tank/2021…).
Read 39 tweets

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