A look at the sort of feminazi extremists controlling the sick and sorry Greenies these days and who of course HATE misogynist Tony Abbott.Women no longer the gentler sex!AMM 16/09/2018
Spoken from a curmudgeon bloke’s point of view, women, well … some women of the feminazi ilk are charging down the road to a nasty dead end.
Already blokes are seriously gun shy to open their mouths around women lest there be a malcontent salivating for court action—the ‘MeTo thing’ has caused collateral damage.
Blokes could lose their jobs for giving a thumbs up and a wink. I don’t open doors anymore since being publicly humiliated for doing so. Yeah, I held the door open and she breezed through without a word until I said, “I’m not the doorman you know.” “Ah get effed ya pervert,” she screamed, which alerted bank security.
It’s funny how the loud feminazi squad look like clones of that stupid Greens senator—Sarah Mung-Bean! The other funny thing is that, praise the Lord, the really attractive beauties spend half their wages on looking good, provoking approbation—it makes everyone feel good. Except the bitter equality warriors that turn men off like a 200,000 volt short circuit.
Patriarchy paradox: how equality reinforces stereotypesSource: The Times
We all know what is meant to happen when the genders become more equal. As women smash glass ceilings and open up education, other differences should disappear too.
Without the psychological shackles of being the second sex, women are free to think and behave as they want; to become physicists or CEOs, unfettered by outdated stereotypes.
France, for example, even has a Minister for Gender Equality, Marlene Schiappa.
Yet to the confusion of psychologists, we are seeing the reverse. The more gender equality in a country, the greater the difference in the way men and women think. It could be called the patriarchy paradox.
Two new studies have again demonstrated this counterintuitive result, meaning it is now one of the best-established findings in psychology, even if no one can properly explain it.
In a survey of about 130,000 people from a total of 22 countries, scientists from the University of Gothenburg have shown that countries with more women in the workforce, parliament and education are also those in which men and women diverge more on psychological traits.
Separately, a research paper published in the online journal Plos One found that in countries ranked as less gender equal by the World Economic Forum, women were more likely to choose traditionally male courses such as the sciences, or online study.
Erik Mac Giolla was the lead researcher in the first study. He said that, if anything, the results found a bigger difference than in previous work. Personality is typically measured using the “big five” traits. These are openness, extraversion, agreeableness, conscientiousness and neuroticism. Women typically score higher on all of them, but there is always overlap.
In China, which still scores low on gender parity, the personality overlap between men and women was found to be about 84 per cent. In the Netherlands, which is among the most gender equal societies, it turned out to be just 61 per cent.
“It seems that as gender equality increases, as countries become more progressive, men and women gravitate towards traditional gender norms,” said Dr Mac Giolla. “Why is this happening? I really don’t know.”
Steve Stewart-Williams, from the University of Nottingham, said that there was now too much evidence of this effect to consider it a fluke.
“It’s not just personality. The same counterintuitive pattern has been found in many other areas, including attachment styles, choice of academic speciality, choice of occupation, crying frequency, depression, happiness and interest in casual sex,’’ he said.
“It’s definitely a challenge to one prominent stream of feminist theory, according to which almost all the differences between the sexes come from cultural training and social roles.”
Dr Stewart-Williams, author of The Ape That Understood the Universe, said an explanation could be that those living in wealthier and more gender-equal societies have greater freedom to pursue their own interests and behave more individually, so magnifying natural differences.
Whatever the reason for the findings, he argued that they mean we should stop thinking of sex differences in society as being automatically a product of oppression. “These differences may be indicators of the opposite: a relatively free and fair society,” he said.
If this contradicted some feminist analyses, he said it was also a surprise to pretty much everyone else too.
“It seems completely reasonable to think that, in cultures where men and women are treated very differently and have very different opportunities, they’ll end up a lot more different than they would in cultures where they’re treated more similarly and have a similar range of opportunities.
“But it turns out that this has it exactly backwards. Treating men and women the same makes them different, and treating them differently makes then the same. I don’t think anyone predicted that. It’s bizarre.”
http://morningmail.org/women-no-longer-gentler-sex/#more-90035