KetamineAddictYoda
Yodacel
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- Joined
- Nov 5, 2021
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I was researching the growing gender disparities that negatively affects men, and came across a Pew Research article about survey data showing young adults reaching key milestones later in life. As the data below indicates, 72% of women are able to live in a "home independent of parents" at age 25 compared to 64% of men. This is DESPITE 71% of men "working full-time" and 64% being "financially independent," which is respectively a full 10% and 8% higher than women. In addition, 24% of women have a "child in their household" while only 11% of men do. With all of the financial data seemingly supporting men, how could males possibly have lower rates of independent homes when compared to women? Is the "home independent of parents" standard higher for men? Or are patriarchy narratives factually incorrect and the pendulum swings in favor of women.
www.pewresearch.org
Young adults in the U.S. are reaching key life milestones later than in the past
Today's 21-year-olds are less likely than their predecessors in 1980 to have reached five key milestones, including having a full-time job.





