There's no passive aggressiveness there as I'm not taking subtle indirect jabs, I was just explicitly laying out what needs to happen for this discussion to go forwards. If you like, since I was so direct in explaining what needed to happen you could say I was being "aggressive aggressive", but since there was no hostility that wouldn't really make much sense. The point is that in my initial comment I explained that we needed scientific studies for this discussion to be worthwhile - I don't know about you but I don't like wasting time on the internet as people tell me their pure unevidenced opinion. If I wanted to listen to someone speculate about facts they know nothing about then I'd sign up to the Sam Harris podcast or something. Instead of giving me articles you just referenced more videos, so what was I supposed to do? Just end the discussion because you had no evidence to present? I could, I guess, but I thought it was better to give you a chance before I left.Forty Two wrote:Honestly, I don't care much for you passive-aggressive bullshit, like this little comment of yours. And of course, you led off with the "and did you even read the report..." nonsense. Horse shit nonsense. Why make such silly comments? I mean, it's a discussion -- if you happened to be right, then great. You've established a position, and backed it up with a winning argument, and maybe persuaded someone to your position. Why insult, by insinuating your opposition isn't just wrong, but deliberately so (by not reading the article) or stupid because their argument seems as if they haven't read the article? And, then closing with the "if no scientific articles are forthcoming...." -- yes yes, dictate the manner of the retort, why don't you? Nanana boo boo.
As for the question about you reading the article, again there was no passive aggressiveness there as I was directly asking you - had you read the report? I ask because the report contradicts the claim you were making, so it seemed strange that you referenced it. If you're happy using the report that contradicts you, without attempting to qualify or explain how the data somehow supports you, then that's fine but it seems odd to me given that you're basically just chucking more evidence on my pile.
I agree, the CONSAD report is indeed one of the best studies on the wage gap. That's why I linked and quoted it above, since it supports my claim. I have to ask, did you read this report? (Now that's an example of passive aggressiveness, see?). It concludes that there is a significant difference even when we account for all the other factors.Forty Two wrote:In any case --
One of the best studies on the wage gap was released in 2009 by the U.S. Department of Labor. It examined more than 50 peer-reviewed papers and concluded that the 23-cent wage gap "may be almost entirely the result of individual choices being made by both male and female workers." In the past, women's groups have ignored or explained away such findings. http://www.consad.com/content/reports/G ... Report.pdf "the differences in the compensation of men and women are the result of a multitude of factors and that the raw wage gap should not be used as the basis to justify corrective action. Indeed, there may be nothing to correct. The differences in raw wages may be almost entirely the result of the individual choices being made by both male and female workers."
77c for the same work is not a complete myth, it's an important figure and depends how it's qualified. For example, when Obama says it he uses it in reference to full-time work, which is entirely correct. This is why I asked if you can find anyone actually using the 77 figure as a measure of the adjusted wage gap but I assume you can't otherwise you would have referenced it.Forty Two wrote:So, the 77 cents FOR THE SAME WORK figure is a complete and total myth. It's advanced in order to lobby or protest for "corrective action" which the Department of Labor's report plainly says IS NOT WARRANTED. President Obama reiterate the bogus claim that women earn 77 cents on the dollar FOR THE SAME WORK, and yet his own Labor Secretary -- a member of the President's Cabinet (closest advisers) has known that it is not true for years.
The 77% figure has not been "debunked", it's called the unadjusted wage gap and is still an important measure of discriminatory effects (as discussed in the first article I linked you to above). Secondly, we have extremely good evidence that the 5-8% figure is a result of discrimination given that we've ruled out all known variables and we have direct experimental evidence (like the kind I linked above) which gives us similar estimates of differences as a result of discrimination.Forty Two wrote:If there is a few percentage point difference in the numbers, then it still does not warrant the continued use of the 77 cent figure, which has been debunked. Moreover, we -- quite simply -- have no good evidence to show that any remaining 5% figure is a result of sex discrimination in the workplace.
Well it's undeniable that the underlying system is sexist, the question has to be the degree to which it's sexist (unless we bury our heads in the sand and pretend that sexism is over!). We do have some direct evidence here though in the fact that when women entered the workplace we saw gender differences in different fields emerge, and so fields that were previously highly respected and well-paid like teaching and nursing, were now considered almost lowly and undervalued when dominated by women. To add to that, we find that when men enter those fields despite being a statistical minority, they often significantly outearn their female counterparts.Forty Two wrote:Some of the information you posted relates to the whole idea that the underlying system is sexist, undervaluing professions women go into -- like, administrative assistants and nurses are underpaid in relation to professions that males tend to dominate. The material you posted there is speculative, and nonspecific. It just makes it impossible for anything not to be sexist -- the entire underlying system is sexist and so no matter what women are downtrodden. The only reason secretaries are paid as little as they are is because mostly women went into the profession. And, engineers are paid more because it's mostly male. If that's the argument being made, then there is no argument or debate possible. There's no way to counter that, and no way to prove it. It's an unfalsifiable claim.
On top of all that, we have basic experimental research on things like implicit associations and stereotypes, and discrimination in general, which just further adds to our understanding of how something being associated with women causes it to go down in value or estimation.