The main problem of most developed societies is horribly low fertility rates. Lot of women pick very long education path and then career thinking about having children only in their mid 30s… When their fertility is mostly gone.

I think education system for women should be tailored towards different things than men. Teenage girls should have better knowledge of psychology (especially child psychology) health, childcare ect. so they are well prepared to build strong stable relationships and start families when they’re actually fertile. I’m not talking here about giving up on career of course, it’s a personal choice, but I wish the education was complementary for both genders (so couples benefit from different specializations of each other) rather than uniform.

  • nerv@fedinsfw.app
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    17 days ago

    This is an unpopular opinion.

    Congratulations! You achieved the goal of the community.

    But now I feel the need to ask: are you not aware that what you propose is going back on civilizational achievements of nearly a century?

    • Mothra@mander.xyz
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      16 days ago

      It doesn’t go back on civilization achievements. It simply turns a blind eye to the main socioeconomic issues stopping women from having children. It also comically removes any and all responsibility on relationship building from men. It’s an odd take for sure

      • nerv@fedinsfw.app
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        16 days ago

        The main reasoning revolves around mandating roles through “education”. Education has always been a way to elevate individuals and, by extension, civilization. Education here is used as a locking mechanism, not a liberation one.

        That is why I understand it as a civilization regress.

    • BlackLaZoR@lemmy.worldOP
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      17 days ago

      Considering that some people here advocate for abolishing capitalism in favor of communism, I think my take on education is pretty mild in comparison. I expected the negative response, no regrets.

      • nerv@fedinsfw.app
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        17 days ago

        Capitalism is as failed of an economic model as what is coloquially called “communism”, associated with the brutal authoritarian regimes that rose in the late USSR, China, etc.

        Basic reasoning is enough to find flaws in your opinion.

        As living standards rise, fertility rates drop. This is a demonstrated reality throughout every nation. Birth rates remain high where gender roles are enforced - usually through religious belief - and poverty is generalized.

        Unless you intend to enforce poverty, ignorance or both, what you propose is a civilizational regress, not advancement.

        • BlackLaZoR@lemmy.worldOP
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          17 days ago

          Capitalism is as failed of an economic model as what is coloquially called “communism”

          You’re telling this to person who was born in the transformation period, whose parents were born in it, and whose grandparents lived through it all. You have no idea what you’re talking about. This horrible communist system was voted away in my country in 1989 in first fair democratic elections since ww2 and since then I saw nothing but insane progress and wealth creation. Claim that capitalism failed, is asinine. Your argument is incomprehensibly invalid.

          • nerv@fedinsfw.app
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            16 days ago

            It is a system that allows for the flow of wealth to pool around a very reduced number of individuals, built on debt and exploitation.

            It is a broken, failed and failling system and the proof is plenty and ubiquous, unless we are to deny the last twenty years, just to keep within recent times, where several unprecedented economic disasters took place that have led to lowering living standards and the rise of personal fortunes to never before registered levels, while nations go into mounting debt.

            That is asinine.

            But this was not about economics but education.

            Where does your reasoning goes to force an outdated and regressive doctrine to individuals, particularly women? And why are men exempt of similar considerations, apparently?