All men have higher paying salaries than their female counterparts. That's not an accomplishments and is in fact indicative of sex discrimination in the wrokplace. The gap between black men and women, however, is the narrowest, and given the fact that educational attainments between the two groups are widening (there are places where only 30% of black men graduate from high school LMAO), don't be surprised when black women surpass black men in that regard. Not only that, when you factor in all the black men who are incarcerated or Have felony records, it's looks pretty slow for black men. You guys truly hAve no space discuss ANY groups flaws. Discuss your own because their plentiful.
Salaries over all is not indicative of sex discrimination, it's indicative of risk. Men traditionally take more risks in the types of jobs they pursue, as well as how long they pursue those jobs, than women do. Women traditionally enter less risky jobs, and at higher economic levels are more likely to put their careers on hold in order to be Stay At Home. One woman being paid $84K a year as an engineer when her fellows make $92K, doesn't make up for all of her sisters being proud that they don't have to work in the first place because their man makes enough for them to stay at home the first five years or more. Those women should not be angry that the men who stayed on the job have advanced higher and make more money.
And it doesn't make up for her other sisters who do have to work, two and three jobs sometimes, at jobs making less than $24K, but those jobs are regarded as entry level or non-skilled in spite of how hard the work may actually be. That's something different, as well.
I wish white bytches would get off the 'I want to make as much as white men without making the sacrifices/job choices of white men' tip; and I wish they would stop trying to rope everyone else into their gender warfare with their own men. They control the language, and it fukks certain shyt up for everybody else when it comes to understanding what's really going down.

