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The Push For Quotas For Women In Science

mlimber writes "The NYTimes has a story about how Congress has quietly begun to press for an equal number of women in the hard sciences and engineering under Title IX, which is best known for mandating numerical equality for boys' and girls' sports for institutions that accept federal funding. The problem is, the article says, it is not merely that women face discrimination from male colleagues, though that is often true, or that they are discouraged from pursuing these fields. Rather, women with aptitude in these areas often simply have other interests and so pursue their education and careers in other fields like law, education, or biology. Opponents of this plan, including many women in scientific fields, say implementing sex-based quotas will actually be detrimental because it will communicate that the women can't compete on even terms with men and will be 'devastating' to the quality of science 'if every male-dominated field has to be calibrated to women's level of interest.'"

42 of 896 comments (clear)

  1. How about the reverse quotas? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Law, psychology, education, journalism, etc. are dominated by women. Should we expect to see male quotas there?

    1. Re:How about the reverse quotas? by Wandering+Wombat · · Score: 5, Insightful

      What about racial equality? Is that one just not cool anymore? Because I know there white/non-white ratio of people in my field (locally, at least) is about three times higher than the white/non-white ratio of the general population (locally, at least).

      THAT'S IT!!! No more white people allowed to become architects until we fix these numbers!

      --
      I like to place meaningful quotes in my sig, so people will know that I know what meaningful quotes are.
    2. Re:How about the reverse quotas? by digitrev · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Same with nursing and secretarial jobs. However, you'll never see male quotas (a good thing) because that would be favourable to men (a bad thing these days). Equality, as far as I'm concerned, means equal pay for equal jobs. I sincerely hope that a quota system never goes through, because quotas are ultimately detrimental to the system and insulting to the people who get this advantage. Give people a boost when they need it, such as scholarships for people in a miserable financial situation. Hiring should only be done on the grounds that they'll do a good job. I don't care what's in between your legs, just do your fucking job and do a good job of it.

      That being said, I would love to see more XX-chromosome carrying members of our society in my physics classes. But it has to be their choice and not at the expense of more qualified people. And for the record, the two best physics professors I've lacked a penis.

      --
      Cynical Idealist
    3. Re:How about the reverse quotas? by Ethanol-fueled · · Score: 5, Funny

      More chicks? Sounds like an excellent idea.

      Currently any woman can get(or give) a-head simply by batting an eyelash to the boss while her male peers toil long hours unnoticed.

      Mandatory female quotas would be a godsend -- they'd have to compete not only against ugly fat guys, but against themselves! It'd be a most entertaining fight for the hottest, most attention-gettingest queen of them all. The males would win either way as they could heed the Middle East exit strategy that never was(that is, to stand back and let the others kill each other).

      Endless, entertaining gossip and ever-shrinking outfits would load a volatile powder keg whose explosion would culminate in a sweaty break-room battle with girl-on-girl action, strategically torn clothing, perhaps some spare jello from the fridge, and only one victor - the men!

    4. Re:How about the reverse quotas? by jgarra23 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      What about racial equality? Is that one just not cool anymore?
      What about LGBT equality, I demand an EQUAL number of Lesbians, an equal number of Queers, an equal number of Bi-Sexuals and an EQUAL number of trannys to be a requirement of labs which accept govt. funding!! What about straight people? To hell with them!!

      In other news I actually DO have an African-American friend who applied for an African American scholarship who was later turned down because he's not black... Oh, what, you say that African-American is actually a racist term too, but don't tell the bleeding hearts...

    5. Re:How about the reverse quotas? by Platinumrat · · Score: 5, Funny

      Yeh, Like Law and Medicine.

    6. Re:How about the reverse quotas? by spun · · Score: 5, Funny

      I don't think you've ever actually had a conversation with a real female human.

      PROTIP: Real women don't actually behave like girls in porn, anime, or action flicks.

      --
      - None can love freedom heartily, but good men; the rest love not freedom, but license. -- John Milton
    7. Re:How about the reverse quotas? by Glith · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Ever notice that men tend to pursue money and jobs that will make them money so that they can attract women?

    8. Re:How about the reverse quotas? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

      And for the record ... I've lacked a penis.

      Do you tell this to everybody? I'm assuming you are not a woman because most women don't feel that they need to inform everyone that they do not have certain organs that the species in general possesses.

      Have you considered that perhaps you've just lost it? Feel around for a while and you might find it again. Good luck in your search!

    9. Re:How about the reverse quotas? by Klaus_1250 · · Score: 5, Funny

      And what about stewardesses / Flight Attendants? Are they going to take the fun out of flying too? (sorry, but there is no joy in being buckled in an aluminum tube at 40000 feet surrounded by non-hetero males wearing uniforms). And what about Playboy/Penthouse? Are they going to enforce quota's there too? Isn't there anything sacred in this world?

      --
      It only takes one man to change the Wisdom of the Crowd to Tyranny of the Masses.
    10. Re:How about the reverse quotas? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      However, you'll never see male quotas (a good thing) because that would be favourable to men (a bad thing these days)

      In Sweden, there are male quotas as well. As a result, a couple of hundred women that were denied entry to vet school are suing the country's government for discrimnation.

      Needless to say, men can not sue.

      Feminism is not about gender equality, it's gender war, and they are winning.

    11. Re:How about the reverse quotas? by Arterion · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Maybe when we start having a racially-equal number of crackwhores, violent criminals, terrorists, drug dealers, layabouts, and social misfits; then maybe we can start applying it to other things.

      I'm not for political correctness (only fairness). If racial profiling, or gender profiling, or sexual profiling, or any other type of profiling generates positive results, then why aren't we doing it?

      In other words -- if girls don't want to study science them please, for the love of science, don't try to make them. I sincerely believe that statistically, men are better at science than women. There are enough objectively identifiable differences between the sexes to justify such a statement. (The same could be said for races, too.)

      The key thing to remember, though is that, being good at science doesn't have, or doesn't need to have any particular value or "worth" associated with it. I'm not good at sports, and I don't think that makes me less of a person.

      (In case you're wondering, I'm a gay man who considers himself a very liberal Socialist on the political spectrum.)

      --
      "That which does not kill us makes us stranger." -Trevor Goodchild
    12. Re:How about the reverse quotas? by professionalfurryele · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Risk, it comes down to risk. If we REALLY want to get more women into the sciences we need the make the risks of the profession lower.

      By and large research has shown that the maxim that men and women are equally mentally competent is true. There are a few indications that maybe within specific skills men and women differ a little between populations, but by and large if there is a man who can do a job competently then there is a woman who can too.

      However, women are statistically more risk averse. And science (especially the hard sciences) is an incredibly risky discipline to undertake as a profession. Better to be a lawyer or a doctor. And women agree with this assessment. Many countries now train more women in these professions than men.

      The real problem with academia isn't discrimination. I've come across no discrimination working as a scientist. The problem isn't how hard academia is. Women are just as tough as men. The problem is that academia is playing roulette with your career, not to mention damn hard. 9 till 9 for pay nowhere near what you could earn in the private sector, no job security until you are in your mid to late 30s if you are lucky and get on a tenure track.

      If we want to have more women in academia then the way academics are treated needs to change. Competent (but not brilliant) academics shouldn't fall by the wayside, and brilliant ones should be treated like rock stars.

      This applies doubly so in the hard sciences where concrete metrics of achievement increase the perceived risk of those who are less confident.

      We are failing young women and it doesn't just hurt them. While men and women are by and large similar, there are biological differences and exceptional individuals who think are certain way are more likely to be female than male. The value of someone who can think outside the box should not be underestimated, and up until now the box is largely drawn out by testosterone junkies. By engineering a system which dissuades women we not only lose out on a significant number of competent individuals undertaking research (a catastrophe in and of itself), but we lose out on those outliers whose drastically different modes of thought might spur important breakthroughs.

      We NEED more women in the hard sciences. But quotas will just guarantee mediocrity at best, and at worst they we do more harm than good. Fixing the culture of academia will cost money. Money to pay for job security. Money to pay for an image change. Money to ensure the hard sciences are more cooperative and social. Money to pay higher wages.

      But why fix a problem when you can pretend to on the cheap?

    13. Re:How about the reverse quotas? by Original+Replica · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Law, psychology, education, journalism, etc. are dominated by women. Should we expect to see male quotas there?

      Don't forget about parenting. Thanks to most Fathers a pushed away from having as strong relationships with their children as mothers are by being made to feel incompetent as a parent. Of course this is just accepted and even flaunted in our culture these days, we went from having TV shows about "Father Knows Best" to having every sitcom dad being a likable but incompetent bumbler who is always saved from his parental ineptitude by the always correct super mom. Imagine the public outcry there were a movie released that took the treatment that "Kindergarten Cop" or "Three Men and a Baby" gave to men's ability to be parents and applied it to women's ability to be scientists.

      --
      We are all just people.
    14. Re:How about the reverse quotas? by mrwolf007 · · Score: 5, Funny

      Well we would like to employ you to fill our quotas because you are a black, violant, terroristic, drug dealing lesbian.
      Would you consider becoming jewish?

    15. Re:How about the reverse quotas? by y86 · · Score: 5, Interesting

      New physicians and lawyers are now predominantly women. Not only are these fields lucrative, but there's a lot of people practicing in them (that is, there are far more openings than for physicists or mathematicians).

      I know in the state of Maine, being the liberal hole it is.... it PAYS (it meaning we) for single mothers(see harlots) to go to college. They pay NOTHING, receive a stipend to live on, food stamps, rent, utilities paid, and oh yeah, if they have an issue with their car the state will pickup the bill. Oh did I mention the state also pays for daycare?

      Oh, I also forgot, they don't need to pass. One of my friends was dating one of these single mother system users... she skipped class, dumped her kid at daycare and spent the day having sex with him. What a gem she was.

      Now in a state like Maine (highest taxes in the country) it takes a LOT of effort and cash(since white men don't qualify for anything in aide if their parents make 30g's a year) for men to get through college to begin with.

      In the state of Maine one out of three people is on some form of state assistance. Oh course most men don't qualify(need kids or an injury). So to me it seems that the MEN are being crushed by the system and are being forced to pay for these irresponsible women(who some got pregnant I'm sure).

      It's like communism, the state takes from the working and dumps all of their income into the lazy.

      SO yeah, more women in Maine are in college and more women graduate with degrees. Not all of them are bad, some girls just made a mistake and are capitalizing on the system, BUT the system is FORCING men out of school because they just can't afford it(since they're the only ones who pay).

    16. Re:How about the reverse quotas? by element-o.p. · · Score: 5, Insightful

      My only problem with any kind of profiling is that it makes it easy to become prejudiced.

      I agree when you said "if girls don't want to study science them [sic] please, for the love of science, don't try to make them. I sincerely believe that statistically, men are better at science than women. There are enough objectively identifiable differences between the sexes to justify such a statement."

      However, here is the catch: a particular women may very well be better at <pick scientific field here> even though statistically speaking, women (as a group) tend not to better at <same scientific field> than men (as a group). Plumbing alone is not sufficient to determine whether a man or a woman should be admitted to a degree program, offered a job, etc. If the best candidate for the opportunity is a woman, select her. If it's a man, select him. If it's a person (either sex) of African, American Native, Polynesian Islander, Caucasian, etc., select that person without regard for skin color, sex, orientation, etc.

      This is why quotas are a bad idea. With either quotas or with profiling, you are discriminating on the basis of irrelevant evidence (skin color, sex, etc.).

      --
      MCSE? No, sir...I don't do Windows. Yes, I am an idealist. What's your point?
    17. Re:How about the reverse quotas? by MacTO · · Score: 5, Informative

      While not quotas per se, as a male it is possible to be a subject to affirmative action. The lack of male elementary school teachers is of such grave concern to some people that it is a natural consequence. It is a grave concern because about 1 in 5 elementary school teachers are male, and there are worries that the lack of male role models is disengaging young boys from the education system. That being said, inspite of action through school boards and professional bodies, men often fail to find work at the lower grades. Parents and principals keep them out.

      That being said, it is the exception rather than the rule and I have seen feminists argue agressively against it because men have much better opportunities in society and don't deserve a hand up in the parts of society that they have been forced out of due to active discrimination. I wonder if they realise that more qualified men in education means more space for qualified women in other fields.

    18. Re:How about the reverse quotas? by cashman73 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      You must be in graduate school. I graduated from a pharmacy graduate program in which the majority of our graduate students were either Chinese, Indian, or some other Asian. As a white male or European descent, not to mention also an American citizen in a US graduate program, I was technically a minority during my tenure as a grad student; except I didn't get any "special treatment" as a minority. Even today, I work with a research group of eight people; myself and the PI are US citizens, everyone else is foreign national, at least half are Asian. And the government still doesn't consider me a "minority"; which is why quotas and protected groups are nothing but complete and utter bullshit.

  2. It's all geeks idea by Krneki · · Score: 5, Funny

    Now they will actually see some girls.

    --
    Love many, trust a few, do harm to none.
  3. Why do we care anyway? by 91degrees · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Why do we want women in sciences and engineering?

    Why is there not so strong a push to get more male nurses and primary school teachers? Or even publishing?

    Is it because these are seen as female professions and therefore less worthy?

  4. This is ridiculous by lyml · · Score: 5, Insightful
    The scientific process is unbiased towards either gender. Requesting change in that for the sake of statistics is actually negative to equality.

    The only way to achieve true equality between genders is to treat them the same.

  5. How about by BigJClark · · Score: 5, Insightful


    How about putting those in positions who have earned them, regardless of age, sex or race, instead of mandating a certain ratio. If anything, the mandated ratio will foster more discrimination because of the perceived view that they "didn't earn it".

    --

    Hi, I Boris. Hear fix bear, yes?
  6. The solution is obvious. by roc97007 · · Score: 5, Funny

    We must force women to enter careers in hard sciences and engineering.

    --
    Oliver's law of assumed responsibility: If you're seen fixing it, you will be blamed for breaking it.
  7. Re:men and women have different interests by Jherek+Carnelian · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Why is this so terrible to admit? It's obvious to everyone, yet all these PC jerks want to deny it.

    Trouble is, you are confusing the end result with the root cause.

    What these "PC jerks" believe is that women and men are socially conditioned to have different interests -- in other words, it just ain't natural. The concern is that the social conditioning is detrimental. That stereotypical "women's interests" are less valued and thus less rewarding than stereotypical "men's interests."

  8. Re:men and women have different interests by flanksteak · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Agreed. There are fewer women in science and technology not because they lack the ability, but because they lack the interest. This is not a bad thing, but too often it gets interpreted as an issue of perceived inferiority.

  9. As a female by HumanoidCarbonUnit · · Score: 5, Interesting

    As a woman looking to go into a science/engineering field I have to say that this is just a stupid idea. To be honest a quota would have the chance of making me NOT want to go into the field because I would have to deal with people thinking that I couldn't have gotten in if there had been no quota to fill. And yes I really am a woman. I really am.

  10. Bad Idea by SpcCowboy · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Quotas are never a good idea. They spawn resentment from those being left out and imply that those in need of a quota wouldn't be good enough to get in without it. Equality is giving everyone a fair and equal opportunity. Besides, this does nothing to fix the fundamental problem: there are fewer women because they are less interested. If the government wants to start a program to get more women into science and engineering fields, it should be aimed at young kids. Get elementary, middle and high school girls excited about going into these fields and the numbers will grow.

    --
    -- Anyone who has never made a mistake has never tried anything new. -- Albert Einstein
    1. Re:Bad Idea by XanC · · Score: 5, Insightful

      If the government wants to start a program to get more women into science and engineering fields, it should be aimed at young kids.

      Okay, but why should it do that? How about presenting kids with a wide range of options for what to do with their lives, and let them decide what's interesting?

      I think that's pretty close to what we're doing now, and if that means there aren't many women in engineering, then that's the way it is.

  11. Every asinine idea gets recycled. by jcr · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Quotas are just discrimination by another name. Requiring employers to hire based on any criteria other than an applicant's qualifications is a terrible thing to do to anyone already in that profession, especially the members of whatever group is getting the preferential treatment. Any woman employed in the sciences will suddenly come under suspicion as to wether she can actually do the work, or just got the job because of the quota.

    -jcr

    --
    The only title of honor that a tyrant can grant is "Enemy of the State."
  12. One problem with women in chemistry by sokoban · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Guys can have a child while doing research, but it is much more difficult for women. Pregnancy can mean that you have to stop doing certain types of research or it may just interfere with your ability to be competitive in your field. Putting off childbearing until after getting a PhD and postdoc will put most women firmly into their thirties when they have children, at which time birth defects and complications become more prevalent.

    Some professors don't like women in their labs for this very reason. By the time a woman has completed her research, if she has had a child in that time frame, someone else may have already published it.

    Science is competitive, and women are often at a disadvantage.

    --
    09 F9 11 02 9D 74 E3 5B D8 41 56 C5 63 56 88 C0 is the magic number.
  13. Re:men and women have different interests by segfaultcoredump · · Score: 5, Interesting

    The best article written about this was by Philip Greenspun (MIT Prof) at http://philip.greenspun.com/careers/women-in-science

    The best quote from the article was this: "I've taught a fair number of women students in electrical engineering and computer science classes over the years. I can give you a list of the ones who had the best heads on their shoulders and were the most thoughtful about planning out the rest of their lives. Their names are on files in my "medical school recommendations" directory."

  14. So by PieSquared · · Score: 5, Interesting

    So where do I go to demand that there are equal numbers of male and female babysitters, maids, nurses, and elementary school teachers? And can someone remind me what the ratio of men to women in congress is?

    In short: stupid idea. If women don't *want* to be scientists and engineers, fix it in schools by encouraging them to try it and doing your best to encourage the removal of the societal bias against it. Allowing minorities and women who are *less* qualified then white males to get jobs just to fulfill a quota is one thing that *will* reduce the quality of our science and engineering.

    If you want to remove bias in hiring scientists and engineers, at require that the person who makes the decision to grant interviews not see any information that could identify a person's sex or race, including the name. Then, if you must, require that the interviewer match the interviewee in sex and race and if the interviewer isn't given the authority to decide who gets hired, again remove any identifying information from the report before it goes to the person who does make the decision.

    That's a nice, scientific way to reduce (not eliminate... women and minorities can still be biased against other women and minorities) bias without hurting the final product. I mean, what would you do in the proposed bill if you only got 10 female and 90 male applications to fill 30 spots? Pick women off the street and try to make them do someone else's job?

    --
    Does a line appended to your comment give your post meaning in and of itself, or only in relation to those without?
  15. A PITA for women and a boon to misogyny. by Cordath · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Many organizations that try to encourage women to enter the physical sciences and engineering tend to generate a lot of extra work for women who are already in those fields. They expect these women to drop what they're doing and sit on committees, speak to high school crowds, participate in a disproportionate number of peer reviews for other women (to keep panel sex ratios "fair"), etc.. The list goes on.

    These women, having "made it" themselves, often don't feel that sexual discrimination is still a significant issue in their field. However, they still feel pressured to participate lest they be labeled "anti-feminist". I wouldn't be surprised if some women who have had success in the physical sciences have, when possible, fled to a less male-dominated field just to lighten their workloads.

    While it's certainly a good thing to ensure that there is a level playing field in male dominated fields, some of these organizations really ought to back off and let women in science and engineering concentrate on their work instead of wasting their time and holding them back with nonsense. Make no mistake, if you saddle a woman with 20+ hours/week of extra duties just because she's a woman, you're no better than the "evil oppressing misogynists" you think you're fighting.

  16. Re:Note the contradiction... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Yes they did.

    Females are put into positions where they cannot do their physical part routinely. However, to bring it up would be the end to your career.

    STFU unless you've had to carry a female's rucksack for her. Every military school i've been to that allowed females has shown me what a liability they can be.

  17. It isn't that we're not trying by Sans_A_Cause · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I've been on several search committees at a state university for faculty positions in a chemistry department. We are actively _trying_ to get women faculty, but last time around I don't think we even got one female applicant...certainly not a domestic (USA) female applicant.

    In the search prior to that, we had one qualified female applicant. We offered her the position, and she turned it down. We moved to the next most qualified candidate, who was male.

    I have no idea how we'd handle a quota. Just pick someone off the street and say to her "okay, you're a chemistry professor. We need to keep our federal funding."?

  18. Re:I really don't know what you are talking about by xirusmom · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Look, I am finishing my Ph.D in Civil Engineering, hopefully this year (I am a woman, Brazilian and had a baby during the Ph.D program).

    I have never felt any problems with what you call "gatekeepers". There are plenty of incentives and opportunities for women in sciences, you just have to show your work.

    Yes, there is probably a few jerks around, but what you do is tough it up, otherwise you will never make it as a scientist anyway.

    And I am sorry, but maybe some women should not be choosing these careers anyway. I believe most of the disparity is because of lack of interest from them, not from any barriers in the system.

    So stop whining and get to work, people.

  19. Re:men and women have different interests by timmarhy · · Score: 5, Insightful
    that's utter rubbish to compare the lower number of women in science to the racial discrimination of the old days.

    for a start, no one is proposing women should be kept out of these jobs. what they are in fact proposing is that sexual discrimination against men is ok. if it's a cultural "weakness" in america that causes women to avoid science, then spend money getting them interested in highschool and even earlier. don't deny anyone based on gender, it's wrong no matter what spin you try put on it.

    --
    If you mod me down, I will become more powerful than you can imagine....
  20. still waiting for Men's Studies classes by Scudsucker · · Score: 5, Insightful

    If universities are forced to ensure that the gender of athletes is proportional to the rates of enrollment, regardless of actual interest, then I don't see why they shouldn't have Men's Studies programs to mirror Women's Studies, regardless of actual interest.

    This is because feminism was never actually about equality, but improving the social status of women. Nothing wrong with that in and of itself - I don't see why the NAACP should take it upon itself to stick up for Latinos, for example. Whereas the goal of feminism is gender equality, but is really only about improving things for women.

    Take the suffragist movement, for example. It was started at a convention in 1848, finally succeeding on a national scale with the passage of the 19th Amendment in 1920. Know what else happened in that time? The Civil War and World War I. Note that suffragists didn't demand the right to be drafted with the right to vote. Ditto that for WWII, the Korean War, and Vietnam. Hmm.

    Today, breast cancer research receives far more money than prostate cancer research, even though prostate cancer kills about as many men as breast cancer kills women. Many states have an Office of Women's Health, but only New Hampshire has an Office of Men's Health - and it had to start without any funding.

    Men are far and away the #1 victim of assaults and murders and make up at least 40% of domestic violence victims, yet Congress passes a Violence Against Women Act.

    But back to school - yes, the vast majority of PhD's are men - but men also round out the bottom of the scale with the most mental disabilities. And if these people were really concerned about equity, they'd be doing something about the 60/40 female/male disparity in overall enrollment.

    Which isn't to say that women haven't gotten a raw deal, the point is that men have too. Feminism needs to go away, and be replaced with straight up egalitarianism.

  21. Cold Hard Facts by bradgoodman · · Score: 5, Interesting
    As a former owner of a engineering/high-tech company, I've been involved with recruiting. In doing so, I have been involved with the entire process from A-to-Z - meaning that if I posed an newspaper add, for example (going back a few years) - no one pre-screened the resumes or candidates before me.

    My findings are that why yes, we hired much much much fewer women than men. Is it because we were sexist? No. Is it because they were all underqualified, or even less qualified? No.

    The cold-hard fact was that only about 10% of the applicants were women. Interestingly enough, (or maybe not), most of these were not native U.S. citizens, but mostly Chinese or Indian women who had come to study in the U.S.

    While I am being a "racist" - I might throw in that we never, in our existance as a company, have ever hired a black person.

    Was it because they were underqualified, etc. etc. etc.? Again, no.

    In my entire career, I have only ever interviewed a single black applicant for an engineering position. (BTW - We actually made this person a good offer, which they accepted, but their existing employer countered it and we lost them.)

    My point is that there are less "women and minorities" hired into these positions becasue there are far far far less candidates - not because of any discrimination.

    Does discrimination exist in the world? Sure, it does - but to be honest, in the competitive nature of the companies I've been at - and the difficulty in hiring good candidates - I don't think anyone would care if the candidate was a green transsexual with three eyes - if they were a solid candidate - they'd be hired on those grounds.

    I've also worked for "Women Owned" companies. This is something that the feds have set up - If your company is at least 51% "woman owned or run" (or minority owned and run) - then you get preferential treatment in dealing with the Feds, and contractors that do business with the Feds. (Like they have to do business with a certain quota of these companies). In my experience, these all have been a smoke-and-mirrors game - Whitey giving his ol' lady a business card that says "CEO" on it, to try and drum up some more business, etc. etc. etc.

    Certain people are drawn to certain professions - and that's an individual decision, and there probably is some biological basis in the Men vs. Women thing. Like people have pointed out, should we mandate quotas that H.R. people and Flight Attendents be a certain percent male too?

    Now as the "Minorities" go - let's cut to the chase. By "Miniories", we're only talking about certian "Minorities". We're talking about blacks, hispanics, eskimos, Native Americans - and I'm sure some others - but we are NOT talking about Indians, Chinese, or Australians for that matter.

    If Congress really wanted to even-out the playing field - they'd be investing money into inner-city schools - like a mile a way from them in DC - which are literally falling apart - and more like prisons than schools. Turn these into places that foster excitement in learning, science and engineering, and are an oasis inside these inner-city slum areas - and you'll see those kids go off to college and become candidates.

    Short of doing that - nothing else will ever work. You can give them a billion dollars in college grant money - but if their schools are gang, crime and filth ridden places where they just get locked-up for a few hours a day - then no quota system on the place of the planet will ever balance that out.

  22. Re:Nonsense by Jherek+Carnelian · · Score: 5, Insightful

    And spare me this silly "society makes the genders different" nonsense. There are innate differences between the sexes! Go to a fourth grader's birthday party and see. The boys are raising hell and the girls are sitting around talking. Give a little boy a doll, he burns it or rips off the head. Give a little girl a firetruck, she names it and puts it to bed.

    Why do think that anecdotal behavior of children who exist in the current system of social conditioning somehow proves that social conditioning does not exist? When in a large group together, all the boys do one thing and all the girls do another thing, sure seems like a strong argument for the existence of social conditioning - that girl who wants to run around and raise hell is shamed into behaving like a good little girl and that boy who wants tuck his firetruck into bed is laughed at.

    If what you claimed were true, then there would be few to no scientific studies showing otherwise. At best you've got large minority of studies that show there are innate differences in a minority of areas, but math and science are rarely the areas.

  23. Re:you forgot on thing by Toonol · · Score: 5, Funny

    you're also a fucking idiot, like most gay people.

    Well, no, that's just you being stupid. The grandparent is a self-described liberal, so he probably has all sorts of incorrect opinions, but most of what he stated in his post is not unreasonable.

    By the way, there's plenty of valid reasons to post anonymously. Abject cowardice isn't one of them. Hey, the gay liberal was braver than you!