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1.how do you feel about men doing womens work?

Sagot :

Answer:

QUESTION:

1.How do you feel about men doing womens work?

ANSWER:

1.I think it a well-known fact, or at least it should be, that women have historically done work, very hard work, decade upon decade, right to the present, for wages not equal to men in similar roles in the US. My own mother can attest to this fact, when she worked factory assembly lines, doing the exact job of male counterparts, yet making less money because she was a female

SHORT STORY:

I think it a well-known fact, or at least it should be, that women have historically done work, very hard work, decade upon decade, right to the present, for wages not equal to men in similar roles in the US. My own mother can attest to this fact, when she worked factory assembly lines, doing the exact job of male counterparts, yet making less money because she was a female.

I think it a well-known fact, or at least it should be, that women have historically done work, very hard work, decade upon decade, right to the present, for wages not equal to men in similar roles in the US. My own mother can attest to this fact, when she worked factory assembly lines, doing the exact job of male counterparts, yet making less money because she was a female.Which is why it is more than a little ironic to me that recent reports are saying American males of all backgrounds, because of the recession, have been forced to seek employment in areas once thought to be the exclusive domain of women: "women's work", or "pink-collar jobs", the kind of work our sexist world socialized us to believe was somehow beneath that of a man.

I think it a well-known fact, or at least it should be, that women have historically done work, very hard work, decade upon decade, right to the present, for wages not equal to men in similar roles in the US. My own mother can attest to this fact, when she worked factory assembly lines, doing the exact job of male counterparts, yet making less money because she was a female.Which is why it is more than a little ironic to me that recent reports are saying American males of all backgrounds, because of the recession, have been forced to seek employment in areas once thought to be the exclusive domain of women: "women's work", or "pink-collar jobs", the kind of work our sexist world socialized us to believe was somehow beneath that of a man.When I was coming of age, you rarely saw men working as nurses, as grade-school teachers, as secretaries, or they certainly did not tell anyone that those were their occupations. Men were supposed to do so-called manly work, like construction, like being bosses of companies. But that notion has been tossed aside because financial times are, well, tough for many of us men. The irony is that while women continue to blaze paths in various career paths, including those traditionally held by men, it has become increasingly difficult for men to get a good job with benefits, whether we have a college degree or not.

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