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The old canard pops up again and again
Obama called for equal pay for equal work for women in the SOTU. Here's the truth:
In giving the shout-out to the cause of “equal pay,” he checked off
one box from what must be a long list of “must mentions” for any
Democrat delivering such an address.
Corner readers surely know that work and lifestyle choices
— not systematic discrimination — drive differences in the average pay
of men and women. Women take more time off from work, gravitate toward
more stable, safer, lower-paying jobs, and work fewer hours than men do,
so it’s hardly a surprise that they tend to earn less. When women make
different choices, you see different outcomes. And in fact, younger women
without children living in urban areas are increasingly out-earning
their male counterparts. And of course, sex discrimination is already
illegal, and those laws provide workers who are truly paid less for
equal work with recourse.
Class warfare, not the battle between the sexes, underpinned the president’s address, and for good reason. Women’s unemployment rate has consistently remained below men’s during this economic downturn. Women’s higher rate of academic achievement suggests that the next generation of working women will continue to gain in the economy, while men struggle.
So the real question is, when will Democrats finally be allowed to
drop this tired feminist mantra from major political addresses?
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