• @kofe
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    911 days ago

    So there are tribes with both dynamics, maybe more one than the other?. We can also look at things like, say, competitive records between “sexes” (it’s a spectrum, so the binary divide is weird to begin with, but I digress). Men run on average like 30 seconds faster on the mile than women in societies with clear disadvantages to women’s training.

    Is this actually significant enough to exclude women? I fail to see how it could be for a role that requires a multitude of skills.

    Society’s seem to have stratified based on sex to “protect” women, and maybe a lot of women even prefer it. The issue is when we use some societal preferences to override the individual and prescribe roles before the individual can even develop their own preference (men and enbies included).

    What I’m seeing are some societies seem to have figured that out well enough, others are more oppressive.

    • @Cypher
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      311 days ago

      I am concerned only with the factuality of the data presented and have zero interest in cultural implications and any inferences that may be drawn from them.

      • @kofe
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        -211 days ago

        You do you. Data alone is pretty useless to me.

        • @Cypher
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          011 days ago

          Conclusions drawn from incomplete or misleading data are worthless to everyone

          • @kofe
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            010 days ago

            If you think my argument is missing something, by all means, it would be useful to say that rather than passive aggressive.