This world has many questions to ask about Global Warming, Why Animals are going Extinct, Technology advancing quickly and The Growth of population. A common question that is commonly debated everyday is Are Women Equal to Men? Of course each gender has their answer to the question. Men say that they are more dominant and have harder responsibilities. The Women say that Men do not have harder responsibilities and they can do the work Men Do. Men work to provide income for the family and Women stay at home cook, take care of the kids, wash clothes, and do house chores. This is the kind of wife every Man desires. Men and Women must realize their respective equal roles and strive the complement each other in their shared struggles to improve life.
Traditionally Men are the ones that go out and make money to provide for the family. This is why they think that they work harder than Women. They say that women are weak and cannot do the jobs that they do. For example imagine a women being a carpenter. This would be abnormal for a woman to do hard labour work and make carpentry. Men are the ones that have experience of formal jobs, get higher paying jobs, and have more opportunities. “Men-the-sovereign will provide woman-the-liege with material protection and will undertake the more justification of her existence: thus she can evade at once both economic risk and the metaphysical risk of a liberty in which ends and aims contrived without assistance” (Beauvoir 346). Men protect the women and will take care of her. Women live the easily life and Men work harder.
Feminist think that Men don’t dominate women and that women can perform the jobs and careers of men. Today Women are CEO’s and are well off. A life of a house wife is not as easy as men think. A house wife basically has to work all day taking care of children, Cleaning up the house, making food, and doing house chorus. They usually have better results when going to school than men. Women are
Cited: Beauvoir, Simone De. “Woman as Other.” Ourselves among others. Ed. Carol J. Verburg. Boston: St. Martin’s, 2000. Print. Deshmukh, Abnishek Vinod. “Gender Inequality.” Legal Service India.com. 21 March 2008. Web. 30 March 2011.