sardis wrote:If you had to choose between a part-time more qualified doctor and a full-time less qualified doctor wouldn't you choose the more qualified?
I have a hard time agreeing with that choice in the manner in which you framed it.
A woman might have had the 4.0 GPA in Biology at Yale and got the medical school slot at Harvard and the man with the 3.5 GPA in Biology didn't (studies at a medical school in Greneda instead), but that doesn't mean that the guy is a lesser "qualified" doctor. That is particularly true in the United States with its extremely rigorous medical licensing.
sardis wrote:In my profession I would rather have the more qualified even if she is not full-time, but maybe my industry cares more about quality than the medical profession?
Its both. Just like in Bridge when choosing "trump", both quality AND quantity matter. And for medical groups when they do their staffing and bidding on work, their "product' (their doctors) are a much more appealing product when they are all willing and able to work very-very hard. For women medical doctors who have negotiated a 20 hour work week (or 70 hour work month, or whatever it is) that is not working hard. It is instead, a "issue" that a hospital must "overcome" when doing their staffing. And then they have to worry about the possibility that the doctor will not be able to stay late in the event of an emergency because she is needed "at home." Yes, this happens in every industry, but most of us don't work life and death jobs.
Feminism: Eve eats ALL the apples, gives God the middle finder when He confronts her, and has the serpent serve Adam with an injunction ordering him to both stay away from her AND to provide her food and shelter because he dragged her out of the Garden.