Allero

joined 1 year ago
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[–] Allero 1 points 3 hours ago* (last edited 3 hours ago)

Fair point!

But again, this is mostly useful in a production environment, not as a home user imo.

[–] Allero 1 points 3 hours ago

At least three times that I can recall

[–] Allero 1 points 6 hours ago* (last edited 5 hours ago)

I am a grad student, and I often wish we wouldn't make too much distinction. It's just creating problems out of thin air.

[–] Allero 3 points 6 hours ago (2 children)

Even as an adjective in scientific context.

[–] Allero 3 points 6 hours ago* (last edited 5 hours ago)

Nope, not proud as in "yay I'm so happy to be male". Proud as in "I'm a male and there's nothing bad about it or the wording around it, I'm happy to be who I am without shitting on anyone being different"

[–] Allero 1 points 9 hours ago (4 children)

Not here in particular, but I have been called out several times for using the word "female" in an appropriate and normal context.

[–] Allero 0 points 9 hours ago (2 children)

Why?

One can call a group of men "males", and no one bats an eye. But once anyone uses "female" to refer to a woman, it's a shitshow.

[–] Allero 2 points 9 hours ago* (last edited 5 hours ago) (4 children)

People do use them as nouns. For example, in statistical/scientific context: "Among males/females...", or outside: "I'm a male"

And I certainly saw the word "males" being commonly used, which is pretty much why I'm so baffled by the need to banish its counterpart.

Incels may call women whatever, but actively banishing the word because it was appropriated by some group of weirdos isn't gonna help - rather, it will only deepen the flawed interpretation of a very regular and normal word, assigning context to where there was none.

I'm a proud male. Why can't there be a proud female? This only means she is a woman, after all.

[–] Allero 2 points 10 hours ago (1 children)

Driving above ~150 km/h is never ever safe, which is why Germany is such an outlier, while about every other country does not allow for it.

Autobahns are significantly more deadly than other roads.

[–] Allero 6 points 10 hours ago (2 children)

This is basically Formula-1 race car/small aircraft speed.

Regular cars will only get you to, like, 160-180 km/h at full gas.

In other words, this is insanely fast and potentially very deadly.

At speeds above ~150 km/h, even on a well-organized highway, you won't be able to control your surroundings and have to rely on sheer luck to survive, unless you're a professional race pilot on an empty road. Also, unless the car is equipped with special gear for improved road grip, it will become uncontrollable because it will literally start to hover a little.

[–] Allero 3 points 11 hours ago

We're talking risk for the system here.

[–] Allero 1 points 11 hours ago

Sure, I had to make that distinction. I only mean personal home use here.

 

So there is our girl, now she goes straight ahead asking for money lol

 

Today is the 48th year the world as a whole gets to celebrate International Women's Day - a day celebrating the achievements of women fighting for a better, more equal and fair future.

In this day, it is important to revisit the origins of this celebration, and what it means for the people and for the feminist (and wider antisexist) movement.

 

According to recent studies, women remain to be underrepresented in the field of science, technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM); for example, women only fill 31,2% of R&D jobs globally, with most parts of Asia, North America and Western Europe among the underdogs. On the other hand, Central Asia leads the way with 49% of research positions filled by women, along with some of the Eastern European countries such as Lithuania, Bulgaria and Latvia all exceeding the 50% mark.

As the share of women in STEM raises within a country, it gets easier to maintain as women feel more represented and capable of the career. One of the interesting observations is that the share of women in STEM is higher in the countries where there have been large historical shifts that expedited their inclusion; for example, most post-Soviet countries have better numbers of gender equality in the field, as the now-dissolved country has put big emphasis on the higher education of women, forming a self-sustaining image of women as scientists and innovators.

 

In many countries around the world, women enter retirement earlier than men: typically, the difference set is about 5 years. As women already leave work for their pensions, men remain part of the workforce.

As the retirement age grows for everyone, men thereby remain the most affected: with an average male life expectancy of 70,7 years, an average man is going to see about 5,5 years of retirement, as compared to 12,5 years for women that have both lower retirement age and higher life expectancy.

 

If you look into official data on the voting rights for women, it will paint you a pretty positive picture: all countries, except for Vatican city, do officially allow women to vote in elections.

However, in practice, there can still be plenty of barriers for women to vote. From legal restrictions for women to leave their house without husband's permission, to threats of violence on the booths, there are many things that make it impossible for women to actually put in the ballot.

The article explores these barriers in some of the countries around the world.

 

72 countries from various regions of the world still have military conscription. Of them, only 23 conscript women; all 72 conscript men.

Some of the countries that conscript both men and women have different conditions of service; for example, in Israel, men serve 32 months, while women serve 24.

 

As the legal system and society at large fails to recognize intersex people, surgeries and forced HRT continue to be pushed as a means to force binary gender standards.

Neither children themselves nor the parents are properly informed of the harms and risks involved in the procedure, as highlighted by the Human Rights commission of the United Nations.

This comes at a time when similar procedures are routinely denied to trans people, prompting questions on the validity and sincerity of concerns over gender treatment of children and adolescents arising under many conservative governments.

 

Average working time of German men is 43,27 hours, as compared to 34,63 hours worked by women, constituting a 20% difference. Men are also found to be more likely to take blue-collar jobs that are commonly more dangerous and physically demanding.

However, women are more likely to cite family obligations as the reason for choosing part-time work, suggesting more unpaid home labor compared to men.

Interestingly, the reasons for overtime work may also differ between genders: men are more likely to get additional hours to boost income, while women are more likely to step in for colleagues.

 

Women still spend more time caring for children compared to men, as evident from the US survey carried out between 2011 and 2021.

Interestingly, while levels of employment affected child care time for both men and women, for men the effect was less pronounced.

One other interesting finding is that the difference between men and women is minimal when both work full-time, suggesting a more equal distribution of duties due to lack of available time.

 

!antisexism@lemmy.today is a community directed against the gender-based discrimination of men, women and nonbinary people.

It stands strongly against patriarchy and all forms of gender inequality, and is supportive of both feminism and masculism, as long as their end goal is equality.

Since, apparently, no Lemmy communities I know have tackled the gender-based issues from this angle, I decided to start my own. Will be happy to see you!

 

Women constitute majority of victims for sexual violence, physical violence, and stalking; however, the prevalence of victims among men also appears to be higher than commonly suggested.

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submitted 2 months ago* (last edited 2 months ago) by Allero to c/Antisexism
 

According to WHO statistics for 2019, 70% of suicides globally are committed by men.

In the US, this number goes as high as 80%, according to CDC: https://www.cdc.gov/suicide/facts/data.html

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