And the complete disappearance of HR departments, being replaced by a guy in finance doing payroll stuff on the side and individual managers doing their own hiring.
Problem is, to my knowledge, it was never illegal or anything before, at least in my state.
Had a great aunt who was independently wealthy from working in the 1920s and 30s. Her husband had a blue collar job working for her, I think that is how she met him. My grandmother did well despite being a teenage runaway in the 40s because of the WWII labor shortage, but she quit working when she got married.
Women just nearly always chose to stop once they found a husband, and were happy to do it before.
Most things women rally around was never truly illegal, it was just looked down upon and people weren't willing to give it much support. So what often happened is they couldn't use their daddy's/husband's money to get started, and without that most women never go anywhere.
Those who had the skills and passion to actually succeed, always just blew through that social shaming and went on to their greatness if they could. Just like it is for men.
That's what I always say about these 'Encourage women in X' programs. The kind of women who will actually succeed in X don't need encouragement, they will triumph through their own passion and will. All that ends up happening is you cram these things full of mediocre women who don't really have any deep desire to be there, and will quit at the first whiff of adversity.
Likewise, get women out of the workforce, and men's wages will rise due to higher demand.
Competitive employers, better wages, more opportunity for advancement. Many things will get better by removing women from the work force.
Not to mention not having to be around women at work.
And the complete disappearance of HR departments, being replaced by a guy in finance doing payroll stuff on the side and individual managers doing their own hiring.
It's one of the reasons so many things could be afforded on one income.
Not even going into better products and services
Problem is, to my knowledge, it was never illegal or anything before, at least in my state.
Had a great aunt who was independently wealthy from working in the 1920s and 30s. Her husband had a blue collar job working for her, I think that is how she met him. My grandmother did well despite being a teenage runaway in the 40s because of the WWII labor shortage, but she quit working when she got married.
Women just nearly always chose to stop once they found a husband, and were happy to do it before.
Most things women rally around was never truly illegal, it was just looked down upon and people weren't willing to give it much support. So what often happened is they couldn't use their daddy's/husband's money to get started, and without that most women never go anywhere.
Those who had the skills and passion to actually succeed, always just blew through that social shaming and went on to their greatness if they could. Just like it is for men.
That's what I always say about these 'Encourage women in X' programs. The kind of women who will actually succeed in X don't need encouragement, they will triumph through their own passion and will. All that ends up happening is you cram these things full of mediocre women who don't really have any deep desire to be there, and will quit at the first whiff of adversity.