Installation of a gas heating system in new construction 2023/2024

  • Erstellt am 2023-04-11 14:47:10

guckuck2

2023-05-24 17:39:23
  • #1


First of all, in my opinion, (white) men are indeed discriminated against. However, I doubt that this circumstance has the significance to be specifically taught or put on a political agenda. There are certainly other population groups that deserve significantly more attention when it comes to the topic of discrimination.

But I have a few examples.

- A man wants to become a midwife. Try that. If you overcome this hurdle, the pregnant women will reject you at the latest.
- A male childcare worker in a daycare accompanies children to the toilet. Mothers get upset about this and insist on removal from the group. Not because there were concrete incidents, but because men are apparently suspected of abusing children. Experienced!
- Not long ago, there was a report about a university that specifically excluded (white) men in its job advertisement for the equal opportunity officer. Not diverse enough.
- Men were (let's wait and see ...) forced into military service or alternative service, women had to do nothing. If there is a war, men are forced to serve, women are not.
 

kati1337

2023-05-24 18:40:19
  • #2
As a woman who has given birth to two children, I would probably count myself among those who reject that. I don’t think it can be described in words what you go through there, but I would like to suggest the assumption that a man lacks the physiological prerequisites for the job. At least for me as a birthing woman, not necessarily for me as a potential employer. For the employers in that business, however, it is difficult to employ a man there if the pregnant women then reject the care. For me, it’s less about the fact that the man might potentially "see" something there. Male doctors or husbands are also present in the room. Rather, it’s about the fact that the person in the field of birth potentially does not know what he is talking about. He lacks the organs to be helpful or to be able to assess in some respects. Even with a woman who has only menstruated so far, I would have a better feeling. With a trans man, I would have fewer concerns. But you certainly cannot generalize from yourself to others. I completely agree with you on the conscription topic. There is often the argument that women are not physiologically comparable to men. Then there were calls that women should be evaluated according to a different performance catalog in the military. Then there were opposing voices that war does not take that into account either. Difficult topic. Child-rearing is also difficult, I think it greatly depends on the people. We are here in the deepest province in a 1000-inhabitant village, and in the kindergarten my son attends there is a male educator who is appreciated and respected by everyone. There have never been concerns that I have heard of. I actually see it quite the opposite – for both genders in kindergartens, I would find it good if both gender roles existed in education. Everyone can only benefit from that.
 
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