Question:
What jobs do women do better at than men? Real jobs, not the unpaid kind..?
anonymous
2008-10-13 12:58:35 UTC
I suppose I get called sexist here:

1. Dentists
2. Eye surgeons
3. Teachers, K through Senior college
4 Psychiatrists, psychologists, therapists
5. Astronauts and military jet pilots
6. Physician (General Practitioner)
7. General health care.


Seem fair? I have a female Physician at the VA. Most thorough ever. She is also American of African decent. I wrote the VA and said she was the best GP I ever had. Whatever school she was hired from, they need hire them all or clone her. Even gave me a print and explained every test I had run and said I was very healthy for a 25 year old, saying "Except you are 60 years old."
In high school and college men professors kept me drifting off to sleep with the drone and monotone. Women's voices more dynamic in keeping awake. They also speak faster so you get faster information flow. So, have experience and reason on my preferences.
Pilots. I am dating an F15 female pilot. 115 saves weight and fuel. She uses less oxygen. And she is better in doing several things at once. She also works as an airline stewardess because the airline prefers men on flight crew. She is a stewardess waiting a chance to move into being a flight crew member and pilot. She has flown over 1,600MPH where pilots on her airline flights have never exceeded 600.
Five answers:
OGUN
2008-10-13 13:23:35 UTC
In my personal opinion women better at jobs where the provision of comfort is a requirement. Women are natural nurturers. When we are hurting women have the ability to sooth and comfort us. By no means does this disqualify women's expertise in other areas or that men are unable to be comforting. To me this is more than an attribute it's a gift.
John L
2008-10-13 13:08:15 UTC
1. No difference

2. No, why would that be?

3. pre- high school yes.. HS and beyond no..

4. No

5. What? don't be silly

6. No

7. Nursing maybe.. other jobs no difference
Voltaire
2008-10-13 14:51:34 UTC
Yeah your a sexist the things you said can not be proofing true.It only a opinion.



If I were to say think like you it would be like this.But the thing I am going to write is not my opinion



Where in the world would women be if it weren't for men inventions.



19th century

# 1800: Electric battery: Alessandro Volta

# 1801: Jacquard loom: Joseph Marie Jacquard

# 1802: Screw propeller steamboat Phoenix: John Stevens

# 1802: gas stove: Zachäus Andreas Winzler

# 1805: Submarine Nautilus: Robert Fulton

# 1805: Refrigerator: Oliver Evans

# 1807: Steamboat Clermont: Robert Fulton

# 1808: Band saw: William Newberry

# 1811: Gun- Breechloader: Thornton (?)

# 1812: Metronome: Dietrich Nikolaus Winkel

# 1813: Hand printing press: George Clymer

# 1814: Steam Locomotive (Blucher): George Stephenson

# 1816: Miner's safety lamp: Humphry Davy

# 1816: Metronome: Johann Nepomuk Maelzel (reputed)

# 1816: Stirling engine: Robert Stirling

# 1816: Stethoscope: Rene Theophile Hyacinthe Laennec

# 1817: Kaleidoscope: David Brewster

# 1819: Breech loading flintlock: John Hall

# 1821: Electric motor: Michael Faraday

# 1823: Electromagnet: William Sturgeon

# 1826: Photography: Joseph Nicéphore Niépce

# 1826: internal combustion engine: Samuel Morey

# 1827: Insulated wire: Joseph Henry

# 1827: Screw propeller: Josef Ressel

# 1827: Friction match: John Walker

# 1830: Lawn mower: Edwin Beard Budding

# 1831: Multiple coil magnet: Joseph Henry

# 1831: Magnetic acoustic telegraph: Joseph Henry (patented 1837)

# 1831: Reaper: Cyrus McCormick

# 1831: Electrical generator: Michael Faraday, Stefan Jedlik

# 1834: June 14 - Isaac Fischer, Jr. patents sandpaper

# 1834: The Hansom cab is patented

# 1834: Louis Braille perfects his Braille system

# 1835: Photogenic Drawing: William Henry Fox Talbot

# 1835: Revolver: Samuel Colt

# 1835: Morse code: Samuel Morse

# 1835: Electromechanical Relay: Joseph Henry

# 1836: Samuel Colt receives a patent for the Colt revolver (February 24)

# 1836: Improved screw propeller: John Ericsson

# 1836: Sewing machine: Josef Madersberger

# 1837: Photography: Louis-Jacques-Mandé Daguerre

# 1837: First US electric printing press patented by Thomas Davenport

(February 25)

# 1837: Steel plow: John Deere

# 1837: Standard diving dress: Augustus Siebe

# 1837: Camera Zoom Lens: Jozef Maximilián Petzval

# 1838: Electric telegraph: Charles Wheatstone

# 1838: Forerunner of Morse code: Alfred Vail

# 1838: closed diving suit with a helmet: Augustus Siebe

# 1839: Vulcanization of rubber: Charles Goodyear

# 1840: Frigate with submarine machinery SS Princeton: John Ericsson

# 1840: artificial fertilizer: Justus von Liebig

# 1842: Anaesthesia: Crawford Long

# 1843: Typewriter: Charles Thurber

# 1843: Fax machine: Alexander Bain

#

# 1844: Telegraph: Samuel Morse

# 1845: Portland cement: William Aspdin

# 1845: Double tube tire: Robert Thomson (inventor)

# 1846: Sewing machine: Elias Howe

# 1846: Rotary printing press: Richard M. Hoe

# 1849: Safety pin: Walter Hunt

# 1849: Francis turbine: James B. Francis

# 1852: Airship: Henri Giffard

# 1852: Passenger elevator: Elisha Otis

# 1852: Gyroscope: Léon Foucault

# 1853: Glider: Sir George Cayley

# 1855: Bunsen burner: Robert Bunsen

# 1855: Bessemer process: Henry Bessemer

# 1856: First celluloids: Alexander Parkes

# 1858: Undersea telegraph cable: Fredrick Newton Gisborne

# 1858: Shoe sole sewing machine: Lyman R. Blake

# 1858: Mason jar: John L. Mason

# 1859: Oil drill: Edwin L. Drake

# 1860: Linoleum: Fredrick Walton

# 1860: Repeating rifle: Oliver F. Winchester, Christopher Spencer

# 1860: Self-propelled torpedo: Ivan Lupis-Vukic

# 1861: Ironclad USS Monitor: John Ericsson

# 1861: Regenerative Furnace: Carl Wilhelm Siemens

# 1862: Revolving machine gun: Richard J. Gatling

# 1862: Mechanical submarine: Narcís Monturiol i Estarriol

# 1862: Pasteurization: Louis Pasteur, Claude Bernard

# 1863: Player piano: Henri Fourneaux

# 1864: First concept typewriter: Peter Mitterhofer

# 1865: Compression ice machine: Thaddeus Lowe

# 1866: Dynamite: Alfred Nobel

# 1867:

# 1868: First practical typewriter: Christopher Sholes, Carlos Glidden and

Samuel W. Soule, with assistance from James Densmore

# 1868: Air brake (rail): George Westinghouse

# 1868: Oleomargarine: Mege Mouries

# 1869: Vacuum cleaner: I.W. McGaffers

# 1870: Magic Lantern projector: Henry R. Heyl

# 1870: Stock ticker: Thomas Alva Edison

# 1870: Mobile Gasoline Engine, Automobile: Siegfried Marcus

# 1871: Cable car (railway): Andrew S. Hallidie

# 1871: Compressed air rock drill: Simon Ingersoll

# 1872: Celluloid (later development): John W. Hyatt

# 1872: Adding machine: Edmund



now I know that women invented things too but I am not sexist so I don't think like you.
[ALIEN INVASION]
2008-10-13 13:14:24 UTC
I think women in general can be better at almost any job because we are more detail oriented. And women are known to be more emotional.
anonymous
2008-10-13 13:24:26 UTC
Blow


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