Doctor Glyndwr wrote:
Maybe black people just don't want to be in successful movies badly enough, if I'm following EBG's logic; they need to be taught to aspire more or possibly work harder, or some other condescending bullshit.
That's right Gaywood, strawman against something I manifestly didn't say to try to snarkily criticise I point I made about something else, while not contributing anything worthwhile on the subject yourself.
Unless you think Grim's anecdote about
racial bias in film preferences is in some way equivalent towards
sexual inequality in the workplace.
I also didn't say that this was the authoritative reason for the gender pay gap. I said it was a possibility, and moderated my statement with 'perhaps' and 'maybes' where appropriate, to demonstrate it's a possible explanation that contributes towards a perception that is not as simple as mere sexual bias. But don't stop to consider the possibilities, will you? No advance in critical thinking on the last time you responded to something I said anyway.
Grim... wrote:
Nearly everyone said they were more likely to go and see the movie with white people, no matter what the race of the person filling in the questions.
This reminds me of some comedy study - I think it was mentioned on the Infinite Monkey Cage? about a racial bias towards buying colours of cheese. White people were more like to buy white cheese, and Latino people more likely to buy coloured cheese? It was a bit tongue in cheek and poorly referenced, but somewhat amusing.
Consider also that a major reason for a potential bias against women - disappearing off to look after the family, is in part due to the
inequality suffered by men in paternity leave. Historically men would get nothing at all, or perhaps a day at the discretion of the employer, and then they got one or two weeks.
Now, finally, groaning into the 21st century they are afforded 26 weeks leave in an 'either or' situation if the mother returns to work - although from what I can see they still aren't entitled for the extended leave of the second 26 weeks. For the first time, it's actually feasible for the man to be the primary caregiver to a newborn baby, whereas before it was financially and legally impossible to do so on the same terms as a woman. It doesn't matter if the man was predisposed towards wanting to do this or not - it wasn't really possible to do it anyway.
So recent is this change is that culture has not caught up and the utilisation of this opportunity between the sexes is not even - that will take time. Being out of the workplace for an extended period of time is undeniably detrimental to your career prospects. Not wanting to employ a woman because she might disappear to have kids is a real concern for a small employer, but at least now the same employer knows that a man starting a family has the same opportunity to disappear for 6 months.
So yes, there is a message there to women too - you
don't have to be the one to look after the kid, you don't have to be the one to put your career on hold, and you don't have to enter the workplace after your degree knowing that in a few years you might have to take a year or two off. Are you seriously saying these factors and historical obligations on a potential mother might not moderate their aspirations when entering the workforce, and thereby limit their drive and potential to be career-focussed and high earners? It is of course possible to do both, but given the way the deck has been stacked in the past it's absolutely and clearly less likely to happen, and no doubt contributes a significant amount towards the observed pay gap.
Yes, no doubt subconscious bias exists in some people's minds that may lead their candidate selection. Many employers adhere to a strict point-scoring against qualifications and experience criteria to help ascertain who is the best candidate for the job to help limit employing people based on vague and nebulous assessments. Putting hiring criteria into a framework helps, but there will never be any magic bullet to prevent bias of some kind.
On a final note, there is always much discussion of the imbalance between men and women at the top-end of earners, but nobody ever complains about there being far too many male bin men, or far too many men in dangerous workplace jobs that *could* be fulfilled by a woman. Men typically account for
93% of workplace deaths. Imagine that figure was reversed and wonder about how news articles would be shrieking about why such a problem wasn't being addressed. People that discuss sexual inequality while assuming that men have nothing to complain about don't get a great deal of regard from me.
To say that the UK is significantly unequal is patent nonsense, certainly when pitched against an assertion that an independent Scotland would magically somehow fix problems that are ingrained in culture, regardless of government.
_________________
Mr Kissyfur wrote:
Pretty much everyone agrees with Gnomes,
really, it's just some are too right on to admit it.