Not quite. I am saying that the "inequalities" so readily embraced are often not actual "inequalities of gender" at all. It is very easy to agree on these things, without thinking through, especially if it "feels" right.
Ah, but the "inequality" I refer to is simply an imbalance. I think you'll agree that the world, career-wise as far as climbing the work ladder goes, is better suited for males, simply because they will not give birth or support an infant through the first few months or years at home. This is a basic imbalance when related to how society works. Career-wise.
Now, you may say that it's a choice, but I'd suggest that it really isn't. It is a biological drive with both sexes. Am I screaming "patriarchy" or "male chauvinism" or "sausage fest"? No, I'm simply stating the facts.
Men and women are different but the differences are not all accounted for, creating inequalities and, yes, injustices.
Not saying that this was all by conscious design, simply claiming that it is what it is.
There are all kinds of resulting injustices from this basic natural order of things, that child birth thing, and they come in many shapes and forms. A very obvious one is, I think, the voting rights of women. Democracy may have been around for a while but equal voting rights haven't, just to offer a simple example.
Things like women not having as much superannuation on average, yet when it is asked why, it normally comes down to a choice of jobs they have sought employment in OR having spent long periods of time out of the workplace.
This is what the setup looks like, yes. Does it have to be like that? No.
Is this inequality of genders or is this a lot of women with the same choices as men, deciding (or choosing) to make choices that may sacrifice the benefit of superannuation.
On the surface, this is a choice, but I would argue that it really isn't. It is an imbalance that is yet to be corrected.
Think about it: the only way a female can make a proper career with the current setup is to waive her offspring, and to convince her spouse that he won't have any. The drive to reproduce is strong with both sexes but the consequences for doing so are very different for them.
I think career ambitions also stem from a basic human drive, but the drive to reproduce wins out. It's how we survive as a race.
This basic difference, however, is not accounted for. It's not built into the system yet, but I think it should because I firmly believe we'd all benefit. I don't know how, though.
Men and women are not the same, but they should have equal rights.
Some women choose to stay home and be at home Mums. No problem with this. It is a choice, BUT then to use this in figure to make some ill-thought out subjective proclamation about men earning more than women or whatever, is a little bit more than a little dishonest.
Now to counter this the word "Patriarchy" is often throne around and also sometimes efforts to talk about innate bias or subconscious or societal driven expectations or imperatives. I think this is mostly just pseudo-psychology and intellectual dishonesty.
And I agree. It's a reaction, just as militant feminism in general is, and while not the way to bring about a change, the fact that it happens is important because, to me, it says that something just isn't right.
If a woman wants to be an X and has the skill set, determination and whatever, I do not believe that she can not do it, in today's society....now.
If a woman doing this just do so with some sacrifices and by an amount of game playing, then so be it. Men do too.
If a man in order to get on has to put his social life on the back burner, work his guts out (in demanding work), ingratiate himself with the boss, work overtime and weekends. Be available to attend work functions when need requires and so on. Until he has successfully made it (if he has not burned out in the meantime) then I say he has deserved it.
And I say this almost never works. It may bring a promotion but I believe studies show that overtime does not equal efficiency or better results. That particular system is flawed for entirely different reasons.
If a woman does the same at expense of her life and so on too. Then she too will no doubt have the same opportunities as the bloke.
Burn out at the expense of everything else?
I think this is something that should be changed, for everyone's sake.
I remember when my first child was born. One of the mothers that attended the hospital with us, Pam, was 40 years old and first time mother. She was a Partner at a Law Firm. In the time where many of her peers were dropping out of wrk or downgrading their positions to less demanding or part time work, she worked her way up. Finally when she was made a partner, she looked to become a mother. She was financially well off and able to dictate her life from here on......but she was worried she had (unlike her peers) left her run too late to have kids.
Now you may say that it is unfair that someone like Pam ought to feel she had no option but to either choose to postpone kids or risk rising through the ranks in her late 20's and 30's. I would say that regardless, that does not mean it is gender inequality because men are not really considered in terms of time off for their children.
But it is an inequality, an imbalance. It is a simple fact. See my initial reasoning above.
If Pa's only way to make a career is to wait with all that baby nonsense until she's already a partner, at 40, it will hurt both her, her spouse, and the poor kid. And thus, society.
There should be a better way.
I remember another girl working who decided after a few monte to pull the pin and go home and look after the baby. She one time in tears said "You don't know how I feel each day knowing that I have to work while he is so little and not able to stay at home with him and see him during the day". I told her I did because I felt that with both my children at that age and no doubt her husband did too, just I did not get a choice and neither would he. She looked at me like i simply did not get it.
As I say gender difference is not necessarily inequality of gender or bias or anything else. Choices often come with sacrifices. Experiences the effect of choices and the sting of the sacrifices made is not unfair. If you choice x to avoid y and z is an effect of not doing y, then you do not say I should get the benefits of y whilst doing x and without the disadvantage of z because z is unfair. Life does not work like that and to say people that do y are being favoured is dishonest.
To not account for basic human biology when building a society will create imbalances. Those imbalances are likely to boost whatever bias there was. It is a vicious circle. And again, I'm not saying it's all conscious or a sausage fest or anything, I'm simply saying it is happening.
To shrug it all off by saying that life just doesn't work like that is counter-productive. It won't help, but it might well hurt.