I've done a bunch of college tours this year with my daughter. Its kinda shocking to see so many homeless men on the streets, then the universities majority women. I'm kinda hoping she'll go to a school that is 50/50. Georgetown was at 62% female, I think Tulane is 64%.
this is the way it has always been. men make up the majority of both of the tails on the distribution of outcomes. people look at one tail and say, this is inequitable! but they don't say much about the other tail.
This is not the way it has always been. Males dominated colleges and universities until anti-male DEI programs were put in place. And now we see 60-75% female colleges/universities.
But now 40% of the population (in the US) attends college, up from 4% a century ago or 0.4% two centuries ago. College no longer represents the extreme right tail of the population, but essentially the above-average.
This includes men. Men don't care about men. Especially the men who say they do, care the least. What they actually care about is just themselves, not "men".
GP just put it in a cynical sense, but it's true. males connect a lot less than females. They are disportionately affected by factors like the fall of The Third Place or social media ruining face-to-face communication and plannings.
Feel free to ask for more sources, I've been readin a LOT about this topic in the last year.
That’d need a lot more substance to generate a productive debate, starting with how to reconcile “no one cares” with decades of people being endlessly very concerned about it. I’d also expect some comparison of their policies if you’re saying that’s a big reason why he won.
>Its kinda shocking to see so many homeless men on the streets, then the universities majority women
This is a strange juxtaposition. Are the women in universities making men homeless? Why are the two sides contrasted with each other when there's seemingly barely any relation between the two? How is this any different than something like "it's kinda shocking to see so many single moms barely making ends meet, then silicon valley filled with tech bro programmers"?
> How is this any different than something like "it's kinda shocking to see so many single moms, then silicon valley filled with tech bro programmers"?
Realism, to be frank. Even a single mom has better odds statistically to find a partner than 90% of males. That's why there's not anywhere near as many homeless males than females.
Women still have a cultural option to retreat to the role of a housepartner. Very few men have that option.
>Even a single mom has better odds statistically to find a partner than 90% of males.
This doesn't make sense. The ratio of men to women is roughly equal (there's slightly more men at younger ages, but they tend to die younger so after middle age there's slightly more women). The odds for either sex should be roughly similar, though it could differ more based on geography since sex distribution is not geographically equal (rural areas tend to have more men, as women tend to leave for the cities more).
in addition to the reply previously left, it also comes down to age demographics. Women are a lot more likely to "date up". Or perhaps men date down.
Either way, when you have some portion of the 18-24 women dating men in the 25-34 demographic, that skews the portions for 18-24 men. Men who obviously can't date down and are much less likely to date up.
As another bit of trivia (but not likely to change major statistics), women are slightly more likely to be gay than men.
If you only count those actively looking, like you do for unemployment, it can be extremely different. Lets say only half of women are looking while all men are, the half who looks quickly finds a partner, but you are still left with half of men who can't find any while the remaining women don't look, creating massively more men who can't find any than women.
I see, this does add another dimension. It seems the OP was assuming that women are more frequently opting out of the dating pool, but that's probably not a bad assumption based on what I've read in popular media lately.
Sure. I'm just explaining why more men are homeless than women:
>Sixty-seven percent of all people experiencing homelessness within the 2018 Point-in-Time (PiT) Count are individuals. There are 260,284 men compared to 106,119 women. Thus, men are the majority of individuals experiencing homelessness (70 percent) followed by women (29 percent).
From what I see, there is no state that skews so far that women are even close to a majority. The worst cases still almost have a supermajority of homeless men.
Oh, sure, I think the disparity is real. I just don’t think it’s because otherwise equal men and women are cohabiting at different rates - I’d look more at things like the disparate rates of imprisonment (itself a complex problem) or how things like substance abuse patterns or social behaviors affect someone’s ability to stay housed.
To be clear, I think those are all real problems, all hard to solve, and we should be doing a lot better at them. I just don’t think gender _explains_ homelessness as much as it correlates with some of the root causes.