SilentCom said:
PhunkyPhazon said:
...So? The name is stupid I guess, but little girls LIKE that stuff.What you play with as a little kid doesn't necessarily reflect who you'll be twenty years from then.
Girls like to play with toy vacuum cleaners? Heck, just let them use the real thing, that way they can be a little more productive.
But seriously, do you believe little girls truly like to play with toy household appliances? or is there perhaps a certain amount of social conditioning to make girls want to do these kinds of things?
Just a thought.
I dont know about girls in particular, but some kids do genuinely enjoy playing with toy appliances. My nephew absolutely loves pushing the vacuum cleaner around. He's still too small for the whole thing, but whenever the head gets taken off (ie the bit that goes against the floor, plus about about a meter of metal pipe) he pushes it around making vacuum cleaner noises.
hotsauceman said:
spartan231490 said:
I notice you have no complaints about "his first tool set," or "his first lawn-mower," or "his first truck." IMO, you're more sexist than the people who make the toys.
Thats because im not talking about boys toys. Im talking about girls toys. Boys have it set. Its alot easier for Men to move up the ladder then it is Women to. Go look up the "Glass ceiling" or "Sticky floor" sometime. It is because it is often seen as not a women place to be in a job markets or because they cannotbecause they have to go home and work a "Double shift". Men have it made. Women dont.
The phrase "men have it made" has troll stamped all over it, soI guess I've been successfully trolled.
Men and Women are different, and as such have different problems. In some areas women have it worse, in others men are at the disadvantage. Some would say that women lose out in more areas, and I won't argue that especially since as a male myself I have a lesser awareness of their issues. However, as a male I can also confidently refute that "men have it made."
It is considered tragically common for women to have body issues, but there is little awareness of the same problem occurring in males. This link [http://www.psychology.org.au/publications/inpsych/body_image/] is to an article from the Australian Psychological Society on the subject.
According to the National Institute of Mental Health [http://www.nimh.nih.gov/health/publications/suicide-in-the-us-statistics-and-prevention/index.shtml], around 4 times as many men in the USA die of suicide than women do.
This article [http://www.mayoclinic.com/health/male-depression/MC00041] details how clinical depression can be worse for men than for women, and I will quote a section that particularly illustrates why psychological issues can be especially problematic for guys:
As a man, you may not be open to talking about your feelings with family or friends, let alone with a health care professional. Like many men, you may have learned to place an emphasis on self-control. You may think it's "unmanly" to express feelings and emotions associated with depression, and instead you may try to suppress them.
And that is merely the first three I could think up and be bothered finding supporting evidence for before I got bored of building this wall of text.