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by deorder
3241 days ago
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Not only that, but many men suffer(ed) from these kind of biases / prejudices as well. For example macspoofing's post: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=14988299 I had the same experience. Being into computers used to be "uncool". Tech becoming more accepted by the general people is a pretty recent thing. |
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The stories of "getting ignored in meetings" and "having your ideas glossed over until someone else ('a man') puts them forward" resonate with me and other men I know as well. There are real power dynamics in some companies/orgs which usually mean that not only do ideas generally only get to come from men, but usually only certain types of men: the men who 'fit in' with management already.
But when pointing this out, I've been accused of ignoring sexism, or trying to downplay sexism, or trying to say it doesn't exist. None of those are true; I know it's a thing, but sometimes some of the symptoms seen may not actually be the result of gender bias (or race bias), but 'culture bias'. Sometimes someone's just being a jerk, not a 'sexist jerk', but if there's a gender difference, somehow 'sexism' is automatically applied to the equation, which may not always be warranted.
The impact of the biases I've experienced is still likely less detrimental than the effects of sexism on women in tech.