Here is the problem. You are assuming something is different between men and women beyond the physical, but you aren't defining it. This makes it seem more like an assumption than a fact. Unless you can actually define the "something" that is different, that is unique to each gender, then you are simply making an unsubstantiated assumption.
What is the "more" that the child gets? What particular benefit is the child getting that a child who has maybe two parents of the same sex is not getting?
It's all bull****. Plenty of people grow up with only one parent and they turn out fine. I never learned anything from my dad that I didn't learn from my mom and vice versa. Social conservatives need to learn to mind their own ****ing business for once.
we process things differently. men want to fix things, women want to talk. women tend to be more verbal. of course not every man or woman fits the stereotypes, but overall i think most do. women show their emotions, i think that's harder for men. what's wrong with acknowledging our differences?
Then why is there no real difference between kids raised by gay parents and kids raised by straight parents? You would think, if this were true, that kids raised by gay parents would be unbalanced. They aren't. They're identical to kids raised by straight parents.
They are hardly identical. By no means am I saying they are unbalanced either. I counter again with why are we only looking at two parents, gay or other wise? We aren't we considering children raised in poly families where there are multiple parents available to them?
In the end the statement is absolutely true. Mothers and Fathers contribute to child raising in unique ways. Everyone is unique and therefor whoever is raising the child will be contributing in unique ways. There is no getting around this absolute truth and thus CT is proven wrong that the belief is religious in nature. Even going upon the assumed premise of opposite gendered parents vice same gendered parents are better in child raising ( which is not what he said but probably what he was going for) he has still to provide any proof that it is a religious belief instead of a age old social belief.
No, it isn't true. There is no evidence that it's true. And there's lots of evidence that it isn't. You having not bothered to look into it doesn't count as evidence.
PEOPLE contribute in unique ways. It has little to do with what's between their legs.
So basically you know more than people who have PhD's in communication. The gender communication theory is widely accepted, because not only is there observational data to support it, there is also an evolutionary purpose to it.
I'm not saying that every male and every female have the same brains. Hardly the case. What I am saying is a brain of a female will be substantially different than a males brain, thus resulting in different behaviors.
Men communicate in dominance, period. If you go to a party, it's a huge flaunt of who can drink the most, or who can score with the hottest girl. If it is a sport, it is who has the most skills, and on the road, it is whoever has the fastest car.
Have your views if you wish. But there is much more data to support my view than yours.
The problem is that I don't see those stereotypes reflected in reality often enough to even call them "generally" true. They're the "ideal" social construct that we're taught. But in reality, I don't see either men or women owning either of those roles distinctly.
Not only is that COMPLETELY false in my own life, but it's mostly false in the life of almost everyone I can think of. In nearly ever case of people I know well enough to know their parents or have a good understanding of what they were like, those qualities are mixed and matched between the parents.
It simply isn't true. It's certainly a nice, comfortable black-and-white narrative, but it's not true.
Compare which gender participates more in the stock market.
The generality starts to present itself, in reality.
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