Your remarks imply it, but you didn't say it explicitly; that is, what mandated gender equality does to men, especially young men. If women become a commodity, who are the consumers? Young men, of course. They become coarsened and hardened, and when the pregnancy (or some other unpleasantness) arrives, they leave or demand an abortion. Not in all cases of course, but enough to make life miserable for thousands of women.
Another result of mandated gender equality is the inevitable anger and resentment that arises when the promised equality of outcomes doesn't materialize. Because all participants have been defined as "equal," an inequality of outcome can only be explained by . . . Discrimination! If not overt discrimination, then "institutionalized discrimination," or "subconscious discrimination." Women become angry because the promises don't come true, or they don't come true quickly enough, or they simply have no prior awareness of the work, commitment, and time necessary to make a work history into a career, and the inevitable setbacks and disappointments that litter the way (they ignored or forgot all the men dropping dead from heart attacks). I think you've made the point before that all mandated "equality" leads to further and greater resentments down the road.
Your remarks imply it, but yo
Your remarks imply it, but you didn't say it explicitly; that is, what mandated gender equality does to men, especially young men. If women become a commodity, who are the consumers? Young men, of course. They become coarsened and hardened, and when the pregnancy (or some other unpleasantness) arrives, they leave or demand an abortion. Not in all cases of course, but enough to make life miserable for thousands of women.
Another result of mandated gender equality is the inevitable anger and resentment that arises when the promised equality of outcomes doesn't materialize. Because all participants have been defined as "equal," an inequality of outcome can only be explained by . . . Discrimination! If not overt discrimination, then "institutionalized discrimination," or "subconscious discrimination." Women become angry because the promises don't come true, or they don't come true quickly enough, or they simply have no prior awareness of the work, commitment, and time necessary to make a work history into a career, and the inevitable setbacks and disappointments that litter the way (they ignored or forgot all the men dropping dead from heart attacks). I think you've made the point before that all mandated "equality" leads to further and greater resentments down the road.