Re: Who is the Armenian girl that our guys strive to marry.
I understand that, that's why the particular case that I studied regarded a particular sector which was a typical large company, what you are pointing at is a lurking variable and indeed when conducting a statistical inference you have to be careful of the influence of such lurking variables. The income disparity between women and men, has been decreasing and more recently has greatly decreased. For example,
So women's wages are not drastically off, but even with the factored in occupation/industry it's still not 100% of men's earnings.
I have always hated affirmative action both to people of colour and females, people should be based solely on their level of skill rather their demographic position.
I have not been repeating feminist lies, and I'm not a feminist. And when someone insults me, I'm not going to ignore it.
How do you infer what you say from my statement? I was referring to a previous statement made by someone else that was saying women should not work, and I was telling that there are circumstances where they have to work.
Originally posted by levon
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Nearly half a century after it became illegal to pay women less on the basis of their sex, why do American women still earn less than men?
The answer depends on whom you ask — and so does the size of the gap. Some say 77% is overly grim. One reason: it doesn't account for individual differences between workers. Once you control for factors like education and experience, notes Francine Blau — who, along with fellow Cornell economist Lawrence Kahn, published a study on the 1998 wage gap — women's earnings rise to 81% of men's. Factor in occupation, industry and whether they belong to a union, and they jump to 91%. That's partly because women tend to cluster in lower-paying fields. The most-educated swath of women, for example, gravitates toward the teaching and nursing fields. Men with comparable education become business executives, scientists, doctors and lawyers — jobs that pay significantly more.
The answer depends on whom you ask — and so does the size of the gap. Some say 77% is overly grim. One reason: it doesn't account for individual differences between workers. Once you control for factors like education and experience, notes Francine Blau — who, along with fellow Cornell economist Lawrence Kahn, published a study on the 1998 wage gap — women's earnings rise to 81% of men's. Factor in occupation, industry and whether they belong to a union, and they jump to 91%. That's partly because women tend to cluster in lower-paying fields. The most-educated swath of women, for example, gravitates toward the teaching and nursing fields. Men with comparable education become business executives, scientists, doctors and lawyers — jobs that pay significantly more.
I have always hated affirmative action both to people of colour and females, people should be based solely on their level of skill rather their demographic position.
Don't take it so personally. If you repeat feminist lies that have no backing I'll call you out on it. Also, let's stop asking for maturity. Life's a b!tch, so don't expect everyone to go along. If you prove your points everything will be fine.
I did read what you said. You're saying there are times when women have to work, and I'm saying the company shouldn't care about these circumstances.
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