I’ve looked, and you never proved me wrong. You’ve simply proved that you have a different opinion — one that is not based on either experience or education regarding this particular topic. It’s all literally your opinion, and you’re trying to present your opinion as fact. It’s clearly not.[/quote]
This is kind of a dead horse, but at this point I’m really curious how your brain works. Which of these is not a fact, and how do they not prove that you were wrong?
Fact: You said people segregated boys and girls for fear of feminizing boys.
Fact: I said you imagine that.
Fact: You said you didn’t.
Fact: You did imagine it, right there on that thread. You claimed I wanted to segregate boys and girls because I feared feminizing boys.
Fact: I had said no such thing.
Fact: You had imagined it (it wasn’t there, yet you saw it).
Ergo: You were wrong. You do imagine people wanting to segregate boys and girls for fear of feminizing boys. You did it right there on that thread.[/quote]
It is a dead horse. Re-read the thread. I stand by what I’ve written there. What I posted is factual.
Gender stereotyping — a cultural and environmental input — affects how children are segregated, whether they self-segregate, or if their parents separate them into segregated groups. This is a fact.
Many parents segregate their childrens’ playgroups by gender. They often (usually) do this from a very early age. It is also much more common among parents with sons.