[quote name='Spokker']On a macro scale, there is very little or zero wage gap when one factors in all relevant variables such as education, experience, hours worked, risk of injury or death on the job, choice of major, etc. I mean, damn, over 90% of fatal work-related accidents happen to men. Women are not expected to work those jobs. They generally do not.
In some industries, there is a wage gap in which women benefit. Women also tend to take more sick days than men. Like most workers, women are generally paid what they are worth.
There will be individual cases here and there where there is a legitimate wage discrimination issue in which a company acted poorly, and that's what Ledbetter was all about. Women can go to court and challenge these companies for back pay. But the Ledbetter legislation can only help when there is a legitimate case, and the majority of the wage gap has to do with the variables I mentioned above.
I predict the raw wage gap will decrease as women earn higher levels of education and after decades these women will have as much experience as the average male worker. After all, the majority of college students are women. At that point I guess it will depend on what they majored in.
A good overview of the wage gap is this book:
http://www.amazon.com/Why-Men-Earn-...2109/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1330917849&sr=8-1
He was a guest on the Tom Leykis Show if you'd rather have an audio explanation: [/QUOTE]
Is it so hard for you to make your own goddamn arguments or summarize others instead of posting your insipid links?
The wage gap isn't just about a matter of pay inequality, but social contructions of gender roles steeped in patriarchy. Considering you depth of knowledge, you probably think that girls just "naturally" like dolls and "girl" stuff and boys "naturally" like to play war and "boy" stuff.
[quote name='Spokker']The Republicans were the least of his problems. In June of 2009, only 30 of 256 Democrats in the House voted against spending another $100 billion on the Iraq and Afghanistan wars.
The truth of the matter is that they are not the anti-war party. That is a myth. Republicans and Democrats both want war. Obama took advantage of war fatigue among the American people and promised them something he could not deliver.
My answer to the headline of this news article is a strong yes:
http://denver.cbslocal.com/2011/03/21/do-anti-war-democrats-feel-duped/[/QUOTE]
So what was the

ing point of mentioning a Democratic majority then?