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  • Women in the United States and in Western Europe are the freest and most liberated in

  • human history. In many ways they are not merely doing as well as men, they are doing better.

  • Women's emancipation is one of the glories of Western civilization and one of the great

  • chapters in the history of freedom.

  • So, why then are those in the women's movement, such as the leaders and members of activist

  • groups like the National Organization for Women, the professors in Women's Studies departments

  • at our colleges, and many women in the media, why are they still so dissatisfied?

  • These feminists hardly acknowledge women's progress.

  • Yes, they concede, that some advances have been made, but the fact that most women reject

  • their activist brand of feminism and think of themselves as free is, for this crowd,

  • proof of just how entrenched patriarchy and inequality truly are: women are so oppressed,

  • they don't even know it.

  • Year after year these activists make claims about women and violence, women and depression,

  • women and eating disorders, women and workplace injustice -- to support their views. Over

  • the years, I have looked carefully at many of these claims. What I have found is that

  • much of the supporting evidence, mostly victim statistics, is misleading and often flat out

  • wrong.

  • Consider the issue of the so-called gender wage gap. How many times have you heard that,

  • for the same work, women receive 77 cents for every dollar a man earns? This charge

  • is constantly repeated by feminist activists and their supporters, yet it is so deeply

  • misleading as to border on outright falsehood. The 23-cent gender pay gap is simply the difference

  • between the average earnings of all men and women working full-time. It does not take

  • account for differences in occupations, positions, education, job tenure, or hours worked per

  • week.

  • Now, wage-gap activists in groups like the American Association of University Women or

  • the National Women's Law Center they say, no, no -- even when you control for these

  • factors, women still earn less. Well it always turns out that they have omitted one or two

  • crucial data points.

  • Take the case of doctors. On the surface, it looks like female physicians are clearly

  • victims of wage discrimination -- they appear to earn less for the same work. But dig a

  • little deeper beneath the surface and you find that women are far more likely than men

  • to enter lower paying specialties like pediatrics or family medicine than higher-paying cardiology

  • or anesthesiology. They are also more likely to work part time. And even women who work

  • full time put in about 7 percent fewer hours than men. Women physicians are also far more

  • likely to take long leaves of absence -- usually to start a family. Now, there are exceptions,

  • but most workplace pay gaps narrow to the point of vanishing when one accounts for all

  • of these relevant factors.

  • Now, how do the women's advocacy groups react to this? They insist that women's choices

  • are not truly free. Women who decide, say, to stay home with children, or to work fewer

  • hours, or to become pediatricians rather than heart surgeons, are held back by

  • "invisible barriers" or internalized oppression.

  • According to the National Organization for Women,

  • powerful sexist stereotypes "steer" women and men "toward different education,

  • training, and career paths" and family roles." But is it really social conditioning that

  • explains women's vocational preferences and their special attachment to children?

  • Perhaps in the pursuit of happiness, men and women take somewhat different paths. And,

  • isn't it more than a little patronizing to suggest that most American women are not free?

  • They're not self-determining human beings?

  • And here is a common sense proof that the male-female wage gap is untrue. If it were

  • really true that an employer could get away with paying Jill less than Jack for the exact

  • same work, wouldn't most employers fire as many of their male employees as possible,

  • and replace them with females, and enjoy a huge market advantage?

  • As a regular campus lecturer, I routinely encounter students who have fully accepted

  • the feminist propaganda. American college women are arguably the most fortunate, liberated

  • beings on the planet -- yet in their feminist theory classes they are likely to learn that

  • they are put upon and tyrannized by men. And the more elite the school, the more advanced

  • the degree, the more likely they are to take such feminist propaganda seriously.

  • But this doesn't have to continue.

  • But this doesn't have to continue. The time has come for young woman to take back feminism.

  • Reform it. Correct its excesses. Repudiate the victim propaganda. Get rid of the "women

  • are from Venus, men are from hell" storylines.

  • Begin the arduous task of correcting almost three decades of feminist misinformation.

  • Women who are plagued by workplace injustice or sexual violence will be best helped by

  • truth and solid research -- not by hysteria and hype.

  • And a final piece of personal advice for young women: appreciate, and make good use of, the

  • unprecedented freedom that you have.

  • I'm Christina Hoff Sommers of the American Enterprise Institute for Prager University.

Women in the United States and in Western Europe are the freest and most liberated in

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フェミニズム対真実 (Feminism vs. Truth)

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    邱潔茹 に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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