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Reply to "Why when a woman is running is it called a "Woman's Card"...when never in the history of the US ..."
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous] Second post: men "hold the deck" despite lower college graduation rates, lower life expectancy, more homelessness, rampant discrimination in child custody determinations. Obviously a massive overstatement with no nuance. Third post: white men automatically full of "grievances" and "resentful." Not some, of course, but all. And of course if a white male has a position on an issue involving race / gender it can never be justified. Anyways I don't even care if people vote for Hillary b/c she is a woman But you can build up without tearing others down. [/quote] If men don't hold the deck, why have there only been male presidents? Why is the composition of the US Congress 80 percent men? You cannot possibly be serious thinking that somehow [b]women[/b] are holding all the cards.[/quote] Maybe men are relatively advantaged in some ways and women are relatively advantaged in others? No, that sounds too reasonable to possibly be true. [/quote] I think you're right in many of the areas you described above (except maybe college graduation rates...I think there's a lot more complexity driving that one). But life expectancy, homelessness, and parental rights have nothing to do with which gender wields more political power and has an advantage in being elected President...that's what this thread is about.[/quote] Well personally I'd rather have a female politician who treats make issues with respect and consideration than a male politician that doesn't. But that is probably a typical viewpoint of young males, I think der folks are different on both fronts.[/quote] I meant make issues, sorry.[/quote] Ah, crap.[/quote]
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