nadine wrote:Taoism can also lead people to just accept their lot in life. Very popular in feudal China. Good for keeping people in their place.
Ooooooh - you make it sound like a government plot ...! No, it's just people choosing to live virtuous lives [imagine long discussion here, way beyond the scope of this thread], free of self-imposed oppression, and finding genuine happiness in doing so. It's not about "settling" for the left-overs. Taoists have also opposed tyrants (e.g. modern day Tibet vs. China), but they'd prefer to change the world by setting good examples for others to follow (like small-time versions of the Dalai Lama, Gandhi, Jesus Christ, etc.), rather than by trying to coerce change in others through governmental regulations.
Coercion (such as "equal opportunity" programs) might create the illusion of behavioral change, but the change only lasts as long as the regulations are enforced, and not even then, for those who get away with breaking the rules. Changing hearts is a much slower process, but is genuine and enduring. It is my belief that Obama has a much better chance of changing hearts than Clinton does, and that's my primary reason for supporting him.
It is also my belief that harpies with sexist chips on their shoulders do more harm than good to the ultimate goal of being accepted as "equals." Do you really want to claim an annoying, whining bitch as
your equal? I certainly don't. Here's one example why ...
I worked 30 years for IBM as an engineer and software developer. When I joined the company in 1972, I was the ONLY woman engineer in the product development lab here in Austin. [Insert many funny stories here, to which some women might have taken offense, but I didn't. I had a blast.] Another woman was hired the year after me. She was a radical feminist nazi (just trying to paint a vivid picture here for you) who made the work environment miserable for me and everybody else. She didn't last long. I wouldn't be surprised if she sued the company on her way out.
I retired from that career in 2002, as a top-performing Senior Application Developer (highest rank possible w/o going into management - ick!) for IBM Corporate Marketing, reporting directly to HQ in Armonk. I didn't waste sleep or time worrying if a man in a similar position made more than I did. I was paid plenty and was totally happy with my "working conditions."*
Call it what you will, I have no complaints about my "lot in life."
* BTW - my last manager at corporate HQ, an exquisitely Jewish man & Hebrew scholar, one of the funniest and smartest people I will ever know, greeted me with "sweetheart" whenever I came to NY; and at the end of our last team meeting before I retired, he gave me a hug and a (fatherly) kiss - yes, an actual
kiss, on IBM property, in front of the entire team, including women and a Director of the company! He wasn't being sexist. It was just a sincere expression of his warmest regard for me. The Director, a sentimental Canadian, also gave me a fatherly farewell kiss. I'm guessing it was a first for IBM retirement celebrations.