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Phr33 st00f pl0x

9 points| protolif | 12 years ago |protolif.com

6 comments

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[+] jeremysmyth|12 years ago|reply
I'm not sure I know where to start.

Firstly, "Lots of well-meaning people in the tech industry are giving free things to girls." I don't think this stretches to giving unqualified non-programmers programming jobs (which is the inference I'm taking from the piece). I also don't think it's as industry-destroying as OP suggests. I do believe that there's a possibility that some companies try harder to find qualified women so that it's more likely that a less qualified man gets pushed out, but that's not at all the same as "free stuff".

Secondly, programming is difficult. I went to school to learn how to do it, even though I started way back in my teens. Lots of other folk on here went to school for it too. Like any skilled technical job, you wouldn't expect to pick your way through the minefield of complex concepts, principles, and fundamentals and just whack away at tools until you get what you want. It's hard, so anyone who blames some arbitrary selection criteria because they're underqualified should look at the underqualified bit before the other criteria.

It's hard knowing that you're not good enough to follow your dream. The solution is to get better, not blame someone else.

[+] ronaldx|12 years ago|reply
"I want to deny opportunities to others in order to preserve my own advantage"
[+] claudius|12 years ago|reply
"I don’t want to provide extras to others as that would devalue their accomplishments, hence supporting prejudice"
[+] casiotone|12 years ago|reply
Oh goody, yet another man's opinion on the REAL problem women face that just so happens to align exactly with the status quo.
[+] lawl|12 years ago|reply
You're denying a man to have an opinion about sexism? That's sexism! (obviously joking)