AnGaelach wrote: » Marginalised how exactly? By being twice as likely to get a job in STEM fields as men are*? Don't give me that marginalised trollop, it's a falsehood. *http://www.news.cornell.edu/stories/2015/04/women-preferred-21-over-men-stem-faculty-positions
marienbad wrote: » I am being reasonable ! You are the one comparing the proposed use of a word and the wearing of a t-shirt to some Orwellian revival of Nazism.
Of course he can wear what he likes , but both you and he are extremely naïve if you are unaware of the reaction it would cause .
And just in case you try to shoehorn some other notion you have on to me , knowledge of an outcome does denote approval of that outcome .
I didn't ask you about the guy who owns Price Waterhouse.
oscarBravo wrote: » ...and that's where you missed the point. It's not about resources. It's a metaphor. I bet if you thought really really hard about it, you'd be able to figure out what the actual point of the metaphor is. But that wouldn't do, would it?
marienbad wrote: » So a system designed to correct institutional sexism is seen to be working and you get all upset about it ?
Professor Moriarty wrote: » I do think women find it harder to get to the upper echelons in many fields of endeavour. It's changing thankfully, but a casual glance around most universities, for instance, will show that much work remains. Great to see that outlier stat, shows progress.
Sand wrote: » No, I am comparing an attempt to control language to achieve control over peoples thoughts to an Orwell novel which highlighted attempts to control language as an attempt to achieve control over peoples thoughts. Yes, nomark SJWs would be enraged. Because they are nomark SJWs. That is why 'Social Justice Warrior' is a pejorative. Of course not. You didn't ask me about Matt Taylor either.
AnGaelach wrote: » I'm not getting upset, I am disputing a claim. He claimed women are persistently marginalised, but that is not at all true, and I provided a link to support that.
marienbad wrote: » You posed a link than shows a historic imbalance is being corrected .
marienbad wrote: » Well it would appear you don't read Orwell either as the quote you used is from his Notes On Nationalism not his novels , but then just bring Orwell into it as a bit of hyperbole is always useful.
marienbad wrote: » So are you going to answer my question about your son going to the interview ?
AnGaelach wrote: » I posted a link to prove a point that women aren't being "persistently marginalised". Regardless, the discussion was not with you, and all you added was trying to call me angry/upset.
marienbad wrote: » Well it would appear you don't read Orwell either as the quote you used is from his Notes On Nationalism not his novels , but then just bring Orwell into it as a bit of hyperbole is always useful .
So are you going to answer my question about your son going to the interview ?
marienbad wrote: » It is an open forum, you don't get to say who the discussion is with
osmiumartist wrote: » Nope. Correcting would be firing those who unfairly got their position and replacing them with the women who should have got them. Replacing one sexism with another is neither "correcting" nor "progress".
marienbad wrote: » Best method is to tilt the balance going forward , works with every society that has inbuilt unfairness , catholic in NI , people of colour in the USA , women in most places
marienbad wrote: » That would be one way of doing it , but how do you go back in time and decide who and how got their positions unfairly ? And victimise their families as well . Totally impractical Best method is to tilt the balance going forward , works with every society that has inbuilt unfairness , catholic in NI , people of colour in the USA , women in most places
osmiumartist wrote: » You actually think the objective is the have 50% of all staff male/female, or is it to hire the best candidate for the job?
Sand wrote: » I brought Orwell into it way before the quote - you know his 1984 novel and the Newspeak reference from it, right? Your question has already been answered - Matt Taylor is not sitting an interview for your approval. It has no relevance to your hypothetical. So yes, I'd tell my son to wear whatever he feels like and be himself. So where are you going to go with this cul de sac point of yours?
Widdershins wrote: » Is it working too well, though. Do gender quotas work against people who are suited to a job, based on their merits, but aren't the required gender?
marienbad wrote: » The ideal is that all sectors should represent as best we can make it the composition of society . Sometimes that can only be achieved with positive discrimination
marienbad wrote: » Of course they work against people who may be best qualified for a job . But is that not how we got here in the first place ? All those protestants working in Harland & Wolff didn't lose too much sleep over the much more qualified catholics locked outside the gate now did they ? The ideal is that all sectors should represent as best we can make it the composition of society . Sometimes that can only be achieved with positive discrimination
AnGaelach wrote: » That's ridiculous at best.
osmiumartist wrote: » Positive discrimination = discrimination. It's in the title. So will we have 50/50 quotas for firefighters, the army and teachers, or just jobs that pay well that women want to do that currently have more men than women in them? "we got here in the first place" through everything from infant exposure to cannibalism. So you think because we used to do something we should keep doing it, just cus? Not great logic in my book.
marienbad wrote: » why ...at best ?