I had to sit in on a lecture today for work about equal opportunities, now I've nothing against equal opportunities, however I was rather wound up by the lecturer during arguments, but I was arguing for EQUAL opportunities when they didn't seem to be.
They created a scenario about a man and woman being able/not being able to lift a piece of equipment. The female character couldn't lift it as it was too heavy, so they said she should be given a allowance and have it taken out of her job description. In this scenario I argued she should either be sacked or paid less, she cannot do her job (can't lift the equipment) or if her job description has less to do she should be paid less. That sounded very equal to me. So far as I changed the scenario to person A and person B removing all sex's, disabilities and ethnicities. They still said person B should have it taken out of their job description and not asked to do it again with no impact on the wage. That doesn't sound very equal, or is that just me?
Another example they used was the firefighters, they said they were bad at employing women and need to change their policies to accommodate the female body, now, knowing a few firemen I know why this is, because women are weaker they're a liability, sorry but you are, I almost lost friends in the service to accidents because the female crew member dropped the ball because she wasn't strong enough to do the job.
So the discussion point coming out of the rant, should equal opportunities take into account gender, ethnicity and disabilities or should they just look at what a person can do regardless? Should they be equal opportunities or equal opportunities with considerations?
I'll be back to argue/discuss my points later, I've got to go training for work....*sigh*
They created a scenario about a man and woman being able/not being able to lift a piece of equipment. The female character couldn't lift it as it was too heavy, so they said she should be given a allowance and have it taken out of her job description. In this scenario I argued she should either be sacked or paid less, she cannot do her job (can't lift the equipment) or if her job description has less to do she should be paid less. That sounded very equal to me. So far as I changed the scenario to person A and person B removing all sex's, disabilities and ethnicities. They still said person B should have it taken out of their job description and not asked to do it again with no impact on the wage. That doesn't sound very equal, or is that just me?
Another example they used was the firefighters, they said they were bad at employing women and need to change their policies to accommodate the female body, now, knowing a few firemen I know why this is, because women are weaker they're a liability, sorry but you are, I almost lost friends in the service to accidents because the female crew member dropped the ball because she wasn't strong enough to do the job.
So the discussion point coming out of the rant, should equal opportunities take into account gender, ethnicity and disabilities or should they just look at what a person can do regardless? Should they be equal opportunities or equal opportunities with considerations?
I'll be back to argue/discuss my points later, I've got to go training for work....*sigh*