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by alexandercrohde
3251 days ago
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So, I think there is a worthwhile discussion here that's getting lost in all the emotions. The discussion comes down to this "Should we look at this as a gender debate, or an engineering debate?" I can see why gp wouldn't want to see it as a gender debate, because it negates the negative experience some men have around other toxic male engineers. I can also see why you wouldn't want to deny the sexist element's existence, that would just seem counter-factual. I also want to express a hesitation to reduce this to a gender issue, because I find it so often creates an US-vs-THEM mentality. Because I'm a guy, and I think many managers in engineering are abusive, and I don't think the fact that the abuse isn't throwing out the word "pussy" negates the severity of the situation. Consider Japan, where stress at work has gotten so bad, the country has made a goal of reducing suicide rates. I think we need to unite around work standards before we get to that point, not as guys vs girls, but as workers vs investors. |
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Maybe if workplaces were not deliberately enforcing a men-at-the-expense-of-women social norm, this notion wouldn't exist.
> Consider Japan
No, I'd rather not. A reductive analysis of Japan's workplace dynamics isn't helpful here.