T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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390.1 | | ULTRA::ZURKO | Words like winter snowflakes | Fri Jan 13 1989 12:25 | 4 |
| I enjoy thinking about how structures that seem to be hierarchical might be
reworked to be cooperative. Business, industry, government, notes, family.
But I'm afraid I haven't gotten far enough to even give examples!
Mez
|
390.2 | | COGMK::CHELSEA | Mostly harmless. | Fri Jan 13 1989 18:13 | 5 |
| I once said that I thought gender should be irrelevant, that people
should be addressed as people. Someone responded, "I'm not a white
male, I'm a woman and I don't want to be treated like a white male."
So I guess the ideal world would be one in which the word "person"
had no default value.
|
390.3 | Thoughts | APEHUB::STHILAIRE | I wouldn't say *trashy* Lucille! | Mon Jan 16 1989 12:06 | 41 |
| To me one thing a new world would definitely *not* be, is a world
where everybody acted the way most middle and upper-class white
males do today,( or even the way most lower class males act today).
In other words, a new world would *not* be a world where all the
women acted like men (as we have come to think of men, in general, as
acting).
To me, a new world would be a world where both men and women took
on the best qualities of each sex, and discarded the worst, where
women would have the freedom to do traditionally male "things",
and where men would have the freedom to do traditionally female
"things," if they wanted.
I would like to see an equal number of men and women working as engineers
and managers, an equal number of men and women working as secretaries,
and truck drivers, and staying home with the kids (if they wanted
to and could afford to). I would like girls growing up putting
the same value on education, jobs, independance, love, marriage,
romance and sex, as boys traditionally have. I would like it to
be okay for girls to want to play football and other sports, but
I would also like it to be perfectly okay for a boy to *not* want
to play sports. I would like to see fathers put no more expectations
on sons to be football players than on daughters. I would like
boys to not be considered sissies if they don't fight, or play sports,
or if they cry sometimes. I would like boys to grow up to be just
as sensitive, caring and open as most girls always have. I would
like it to be okay for little boys to play with dolls or design
and sew their own clothes if they want. It seems to me as though
most moves towards equality of the sexes (except for the new interest
in men for taking care of their kids) depends on women acting and
being more like men. If women become just like men then some of
the best qualities of the human race will be lost. I think men
should try to become more like women in some ways. I don't think
men should try to raise their sons to be tough "little men" who
don't cry. Little girls should be encouraged to be more independent,
and I think that's already happening in the time since I grew up.
But, little boys should be encouraged to be more sensitive and
less agressive and I don't think that's happening yet.
Lorna
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390.4 | | BPOV04::FISHER | | Mon Jan 16 1989 14:02 | 13 |
|
Lorna,
You had some interesting feelings, and I enjoyed your response.
I don't know which "generation" you belong to, but my own
seems to be moving in that direction. The point that concerns
me is that men have to make the changes, and not the women.
I would feel more comfortable with both parties shifting a little
more to the center. This way both retain most of their original
character, and gain some mutually beneficial commonalities.
Just as women appreciate men adopting some of their desirable
attributes, men appreciate women who do the same.
|
390.5 | somewhat off the point but... | NOETIC::KOLBE | The dilettante debutante | Tue Jan 17 1989 20:09 | 17 |
|
But women have *already* moved towards the way men act. It's the
only way we have been able to gain acceptance in *their* world.
Women have been expected to aquire the male traits in order to
succeed in business. There has been some movement for men to take
on the more nurturing aspects of the female traits but it has met
with some opposition. I would rather see more middle ground as
Lorna was stating it.
One off the wall example of what I am taking about is that it's
OK for a woman to adopt the mode of dress that men have (to a
point) but not at all allowable for a male to adopt a woman's
mode of dress. It's becomming OK for women to enter male
professions but you don't see too many males wanting to go into
women's professions. I realise salary and social status have a
lot to do with some of this but it'd be better if those
differences didn't exist. liesl
|
390.6 | | COGMK::CHELSEA | Mostly harmless. | Thu Jan 19 1989 14:41 | 11 |
| Re: .5
>Women have been expected to aquire the male traits in order to
>succeed in business. There has been some movement for men to take
>on the more nurturing aspects of the female traits but it has met
>with some opposition.
In a perfect world, traits would not be classified by gender.
(Actually, I really hate the phrase/idea of "women's qualities"
or "male traits" because there's really no such thing. No personal
characteristic is limited to a specific gender.)
|
390.7 | how i see it... | APEHUB::STHILAIRE | Remember, neatness counts | Thu Jan 19 1989 15:21 | 11 |
| Re .5, no traits are limited to a particular gender, but there are
definitely traits that each sex has a monopoly on, so far in our
society. More men know how to repair cars than do women. More
women enjoy shopping for clothes and jewelry than do men. More
men enjoy watching football than do women. More women enjoy sewing
than do men. In a perfect society this wouldn't be the case. But,
in this society it is the case, so I think that today we still have
what could be called female or male traits.
Lorna
|
390.8 | | COGMK::CHELSEA | Mostly harmless. | Thu Jan 19 1989 18:40 | 8 |
| Re: .7
Then I would call them "predominantly male" and "predominantly female"
preferences, but I'm picky that way. I also don't think it's a
good idea to throw them into categories and then dare people to
break the 'mold' of female/male by picking up a 'cross-gender' hobby
or trait. Just leave them all as simple hobbies and traits and
let people pick up whatever they want with no hassle.
|
390.10 | yes but numbers can show a bias | WMOIS::B_REINKE | If you are a dreamer, come in.. | Sun Jan 29 1989 08:37 | 16 |
| Arpad,
Given that most job related ablitites are not gender related,
and that ones ability to think and learn new tasks and new roles
has very little or nothing to do with ones X or Y chromosomes,
I would be very suspicious of a job situation that was all male
or all female on the grounds that those were the 'best' people
for the job. I really don't believe, for example that women make
the 'best' secretaries or nurses, or that men make the 'best'
senior managers or restaurant chefs, or whatevers.
When and if I see a situation where all or most of the people
employed are one gender, I find that I am very suspicious of the
arguement that 'those were the best people for the job'.
Bonnie
|
390.11 | can't force people to do something to make the num's work out | ERLANG::LEVESQUE | Torpedo the dam; Full speed astern! | Mon Jan 30 1989 09:34 | 12 |
| Having a 50/50 split between male and female workers in any occupation
may or may not be ideal. To me, it is a complex equation involving
INTEREST, ability, and suitability. If no women want to work on
the back of garbage trucks, should we complain that not 50% of garbage
people are not female? If no men want to be secretaries, should
we feel bad that most secretaries are women? If both men and women
want to be chair<person> of the board, but more women are qualified
than men, should we complain when there are more women than men
CEO's? (Let's not go down the rathole of "that's not how it is now")
I'm just saying, numbers alone do not tell the whole story.
The Doctah
|
390.13 | | HANDY::MALLETT | Abolish network partner abortions | Mon Jan 30 1989 12:33 | 28 |
| re: .12
� When did we develop this elitist attitude that hiring
� "the most competent" is any better than "hiring the handicapped".
I'm not certain, but I suspect it "started" when the first
employer in a relatively free market economy needed help. Having
been both employer and employee, I find it real hard to support
not hiring the "best" person for the job. I tend to think of
it as more "survivalist" than "elitest", particularly when there
are competitors in the economy who believe the key to business
survival and success is employee excellence (vs. "average"
performance).
I have a hunch that the problem has more to do with how we define
"best" and I think it's slowly becoming clearer to employers that
things traditionally referred to as "handicaps" are not same when
it comes to job performance. And it's becoming clear that hiring
a person who is "qualifiable" (e.g. "trainable") may be a better long-
term economic option than hiring one who's "qualified".
And if I go on any further, I'll start to ramble about business
education and re-skilling and. . . 's my job, doncha know. . .
Steve
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390.14 | | APEHUB::STHILAIRE | the dishes can wait | Mon Jan 30 1989 15:23 | 34 |
| Re .9, .10, .11, there is no way to judge what professions would
only attract one sex in a non-sexist society. In the past, and
to an extent, even now, females grow up thinking of certain jobs
as options and men grow up thinking of certain jobs as options.
In our society, male high school graduates who don't go to college,
and who are desperate for a job, may consider being a sanitation
worker to be an option. They will *not* consider being a secretary
to be an option. Even today, a male high school graduate showing
up at Digital and looking for a job might be steered towards
maintenance, or being a security guard, or working in
shipping/receiving or in a stock room. In these jobs, lowly though
they may be to begin with, there is upward mobility without switching
professions. Female high school graduates will be invariably
encouraged to go into secretarial or apply for secretarial positions
if they have college no plans. Coincidentally, there is no place to
go except stay a secretary unless you make a lateral transfer to
another type of job. Also, why would a man choose being a secretary
over being a sanitation worker, when sanitation workers make much
more money. As a normal course of life, boys are taughts skills,
such as mechanics, carpentry, or plumbing, which can be used to
obtain well paid jobs. As a normal course of life, girls are not
taught skills that society will pay well for. I think we would
have to live in a completely non-sexist society, where boys and
girls are raised exactly the same way, and where certain jobs (such
as secretary, waitress, social worker, elementary teacher, librarian,
day care worker, nurse, and all jobs now predominately done by women)
are paid equivalent to jobs normally done by men today such as auto
mechanic, electrician, truck driver, sanitation worker, for about
200 yrs. before we could ever determine that any job was predominately
male or female dominated simply because one sex happened to enjoy
doing those tasks more.
Lorna
|
390.15 | | COGMK::CHELSEA | Mostly harmless. | Mon Jan 30 1989 17:30 | 21 |
| Re: .11
>If no women want to work on the back of garbage trucks, should
>we complain that not 50% of garbage people are not female? If no
>men want to be secretaries, should we feel bad that most secretaries
>are women?
If no women want to work on the back of garbage trucks, then I consider
it highly unlikely that any men will want to, either. How could
a significant difference in interest be explained? It can't be
the product of social conditioning because we're assuming a non-sexist
world. It can't be a product of conditioning based on factors like
race or economic class because the situation involves *all* women
and men (no qualifying characteristics having been mentioned).
Since the only difference in this case is gender, that implies a
gender-based difference in attitudes. It has been pointed out
elsewhere, and not yet debated, that women and men are really very
similar in most of their attitudes, desires and other personal
qualities. Are you prepared to debate that men and women are more
like separate species? Or do you want to premise an argument on
what seems to be a very improbable ratio?
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