Xequecal wrote:
Talya wrote:
No, no it's really not. That's balancing an inequity in pay by allowing the lower paid person to call the higher paid person an *******.
It's an unfortunate necessity that men have no control over this, but a woman must remain sovereign over her own body. But seriously, they need to add the legal ability of the father to go on record advocating an abortion or adoption, and then if she chooses to have the baby anyway, he is no longer responsible (nor does he have any access to) the child, in any form. If he agrees to help support it, he needs to be treated as a full partner in the parenting. Also, if the mother was going to give the child up for adoption, the father should have the right to keep the child himself (he may already in most places), but the mother would have no further obligation.
Except this is also an inequity in pay. Men who sleep with a lot of women make a shitload more money on average than men who don't. While this is only a correlation and doesn't prove that one causes the other, the fact that the correlation exists can't be ignored. If you a man and you sleep around, you're a lot richer.
Where do you get this information that the number of women a man sleeps with make significantly more on average than men who don't? You are simply
pulling this out of your ***.Quote:
Are there links between income and the number of sexual partners that a person has? Table 6 finds no statistically significant correlation (see columns 3–6). Money, it seems, does not buy more sexual partners.
Quote:
More detailed conclusions
include the following:
(i) The median American has sexual intercourse two to three times a
month (among people under 40 years of age, the median amount of
sex is once a week). Approximately 7% of the population report
having sex at least four times a week.
(ii) A third of American women over the age of 40 report they did not have
sexual intercourse in the previous year. The figure for men is 15%.
(iii) Homosexual and bisexual people make up 2% to 3% of the United
States population.
(iv) There is some evidence that sex has disproportionately strong effects
on the happiness of highly educated people.
(v) The happiness-maximizing number of sexual partners in the previous
year is 1.
(vi) Homosexuality has no statistically significant effects on happiness.
(vii) Married people have more sex than those who are single, divorced,
widowed or separated.
(viii) Highly educated females have fewer sexual partners.
(ix) Income has no clear effect. Money buys neither more sexual partners
nor more sex.