The Job is Not the Work
The absence of equality and why women get paid less for the "same" job
This picture from the recent attempted assassination of President Trump is self-explanatory.
Now, one shouldn’t blame the female Secret Service agent for being psychologically unable to perform the function of her job, although literally hiding behind the body of the man you’re supposed to protect is not a particularly good look. She’s been placed in the unfortunate position of doing a job she is no more able to capably perform than a 5’6” white man can handle the role of playing center for an NBA team.
A female reader commented on the general lack of performance displayed by the female agents during and after the assassination attempt:
We all watched the ponytailed secret service agents in action. One hid, another had trouble with her weapon, one focused on her sunglasses, and three became confused when Trump got into the car.
Despite the hooplah surrounding the IDF’s Caracal Battalion, the reason it is a mixed-sex battalion is because the first combat encounter of an all-female IDF unit with an armed enemy was a complete disaster. Not only did the unit fail to defeat the outgunned opposition force, but it took several hours to find the missing unit commander, who had been hiding in the bushes since the shooting started.
Men and women are wired differently. This is one of the reasons why low- and middle-status men so often fail with women, because they expect women to think and behave like they do. But, as the picture above should serve to demonstrate, that simply is not true, no matter how much the illusion of equality is forced upon us.
In most cases, there is considerably more to the job than simply looking the part.
I must say it is frustrating sometimes to be a woman. Like, when something happens - a loud BANG!, a rustle in the grass that's probably a snake, another car steering into the wrong lane and coming straight at you etcetera - the instinctual response of the female body seems to be to simply freeze up for the first few critical moments. I've had many close calls over the years that were all avoided either through sheer luck or because a man was present, because I was simply not able to do a damn thing. And I know it's not just me that reacts this way.
No matter how hard movies portray women as bad ass lone wolves that "don't need no man" and can subdue 5 men 3x's her size in a matter of seconds, it doesn't change the hardwiring.
They..don't..work..like...that.
Makes me sick when married men talk about how scared they are of their wives, "she's gunna kick my ass if I do that!" Please. My wife couldn't win a fight again't a 12 year old boy, & she knows it too.