Odd, throughout highschool, every class and student body president was female. In a school right on the edge between rural dumbfuckistan and the bubble of civilization around the nearby universities.
Good for you. My point was more about the widespread viewpoint that women are incompetent due to their periods.
I've never seen an instance of that outside of fiction, where it's used to paint the person cracking the joke as a dumbshit, aside from jokes about mood swings.
I have had professors tell me, in math class, as I did work in my head: "What, do you think computation isn't women's work?"
What? I've never had a math teacher who didn't rabidly fight against people doing everything in their head, except for the ones who didn't have to on account of that having been already beaten into the students in prior classes.
All right. Did he pin it on their gender, or their laziness? Did he tell the boys "what, you think this isn't work for a man?"
How old were the professors in question, because that sounds like the kind of off-color joke someone in their fifties or over (at this point in time, anyways) would crack?
The Berkeley math department has no women's restrooms on some of the floors. Every floor has a men's restroom.
Demographic analysis used to cut costs is bigoted? It's a bit odd, because in most cases bathrooms are built in pairs, but in an old building in which the vast majority of occupants are male, it stands to reason they wouldn't install nearly as many female restrooms.
And they couldn't make them unisex? Or, you know... something?
If the building's old, it's probably not something that seemed necessary/appropriate at the time. If they're not changing it, it's probably because there haven't been any/enough complaints about it, because that sort of thing costs money, and they're not going to spend that to accommodate a small number of people.
So anyone who didn't do well enough was degraded in a manner meant to be as offensive to them personally as possible?
Woman = insult. I believe that was the point. My existence is an insult.
You're talking about martial arts, a highly physical field. Men, by default, have an easier time building muscle, and thus engaging in such an activity, so it is rather humiliating for a man to be outdone physically by someone not only much smaller than them, but also female, because it shows that they, despite their natural advantage, are inferior, and thus reveals their own ineptness or lack of motivation, at least in their minds.
Perhaps you were just reading the wrong books? I've certainly never found a pronounced lack of strong female characters, protagonist or not, though how realistic they were written really just falls down on the quality of the author. And if you want to get all worked up over a fictional character being portrayed as weak, stupid, or otherwise loathsome, perhaps you should stop to look at how many more male characters are portrayed thusly. And at just how many weak, stupid, or otherwise loathsome people, of every race and gender, there are in the world. I'll give you a hint: there are a damn lot of them, and they're not exactly restricted to any one category.
Fictional characters are generally indicative of how we feel about a population as a whole. What do you think of as a strong female character--River Tam? I've found plenty of excellent authors who wrote great male characters and shitty female ones.
River Tam, the schizophrenic, psychic, genius super-soldier? She's not a good example of a
human character, having a completely alien mind and personality.
Perhaps male authors can't write a realistic female character, but that's hardly to assume "unrealistic" is degrading, because in most cases fictional characters are rather unrealistic, because reading about normal people doing normal things is rather boring.
The thing is, that when you have perhaps nine male characters and one female character, with one or two of the male characters bad and the one female character just being window dressing, one can see that there is something of a bias.
I don't believe I've ever read such a book that wasn't, say, over a century old, so unless you're proposing retroactively editing all of those...
How is "women who had to indicate their gender perform worse on tests" an example of "omg sexist oppressors!"? That's a problem with an individual's own insecurity, which certainly can't be helped by people screaming about oppression and bigotry at every personal slight or failure.
And if you have women being more insecure than men on a mass scale, what do we call that?
A negative effect of society's viewpoints and pressures.
And I'm sure being repeatedly told "you will be persecuted because SEXISM!" doesn't have any effect on that at all...
On a related note, I recall reading about a study on Ars Technica that determined that female teachers at the elementary school level who are afraid of or incompetent with math (and science, possibly; I can't recall if that was included in the study or not) have an extremely deleterious, permanent effect on the female students' attitude and ability in regards to math. If I recall correctly, male students were completely unaffected in the long term by incompetent male teachers.
I can understand them having fewer women's restrooms than men's restrooms if they have far fewer women than men, generally. The issue, to me, is whether or not both genders have clear and easy access to one whenever they need it, rather than just numerical totals.
Dude, it's the tenth, ninth, and eighth floors of a building with female students, female professors, female department secretaries (because all of the low-level staff is female) and female TAs, some/many of whom have had children. It is frankly not convenient to have to descend three flights of stairs (or wait for one of the two elevators, which service 11 floors) down to the econ department if you're either a. bleeding everywhere or b. pregnant, or hell, just c. need to use the bathroom.
Well, that is rather unreasonable. The way you described it earlier it sounded more like only having one every other floor or something. Still, one would expect if there was enough of an outcry against it it would be fixed.