Boxlicker101
Licker of Boxes
- Joined
- Apr 5, 2003
- Posts
- 33,665
Quote:
Originally Posted by Boxlicker101
I hope you are not going to tell me that most nurses and elementary and high school teachers in the 40's and 50's were not women.
That was not a question to be answered; it was a comment of fact. Nurses and teachers are considered to be professionals, and the majority of them in the Forties and Fifties were women. And, I have no objections to your eliminating that hat one way or another.
I cited paternity suits and religion as two examples of restrictions. Personally, I believe marital vows keep more men's pants zipped up than anything else, except maybe lack of opportity.
No, it's not. How often on this forum have men been accused of thinking weith the "little head" rather than the big one? It's an exaggeration, but not an untruth.
Originally Posted by Boxlicker101
I hope you are not going to tell me that most nurses and elementary and high school teachers in the 40's and 50's were not women.
If you haven't heard the answers to these arguments a hundred times already I'll eat my hat.
That was not a question to be answered; it was a comment of fact. Nurses and teachers are considered to be professionals, and the majority of them in the Forties and Fifties were women. And, I have no objections to your eliminating that hat one way or another.
I cited paternity suits and religion as two examples of restrictions. Personally, I believe marital vows keep more men's pants zipped up than anything else, except maybe lack of opportity.
Wow. That's not a very flattering portrait of male sapience you paint there, Box.
No, it's not. How often on this forum have men been accused of thinking weith the "little head" rather than the big one? It's an exaggeration, but not an untruth.
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