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I also read the memo and I think a lot of the science or logic was completely bonkers. For example, he claimed that women were more neurotic, and computer science very stressful, therefore it makes sense that women would naturally not pursue computer science. He also claimed that women were more social, and computer science quite lonely, and therefore it makes sense women would not pursue computer science. These assumptions on how the field of which he worked in were not backed by any science, and IME were completely wrong from basic counterarguments: * Nursing and social work have a majority women workforce, and are much, much more stressful than any Google job by any reasonable definition of 'stressful'. At least at Google you're not worrying about being exposed to literal biohazardous material or handling actual, extensive child/elder/domestic abuse. * Being a politician, a director, or a CEO are all extremely social positions- in fact they rely almost entirely on one's capacity to be socially persuasive. They are all almost entirely majority men. * Computer science is very social in the workplace, by sheer need of doing code reviews. Hell, the popular workflow-du-jour is Agile, which requires regular standups, meetings, review, etc. Computer science is quite social and pretty low-stress. By women who are apparently biologically directed to social, low-stress positions, a desk job like software development should be perfect! |