Just one day after international women's day, this backstabbing happens. But as the article says:
“However, there are signs that the public are starting to push back on this progress to date, which is potentially worrying, but it may also be a sign that real change is happening in society and change can often make people uncomfortable and resistant.
“Over the coming years we will continue to measure this shift and I hope that we will see this discomfort shift to acceptance, acceptance that achieving gender equality is an essential evolution for British society.”
So don't be afraid, the wrongthinkers will eventually learn the error in their ways. Personalitymaxxxed cels will win in the end
https://www.yahoo.com/news/women-rights-gone-too-far-060000201.html?guccounter=1
Here's ukpolitics sneeding about it https://old.reddit.com/r/ukpolitics/comments/11mnews/womens_rights_have_gone_too_far_say_majority_of/?sort=controversial
Just getting started in mensrights https://old.reddit.com/r/MensRights/comments/11mpw4l/womens_rights_have_gone_too_far_say_majority_of/?sort=controversial
Other stats from the study:
Gen Z (30%) and Millennials (30%) are twice as likely as Baby Boomers (14%) to say that a man who stays home to look after his children is less of a man, with a similar pattern seen in Britain.
Majorities of Gen Z (52%) and Millennials (53%) say we have gone so far in promoting women's equality that we are discriminating against men – greater than the share of Baby Boomers (40%) and Gen X (46%) who say the same.
Baby Boomers – the oldest cohort surveyed – are in fact least likely to agree that when it comes to giving women equal rights with men, things have gone far enough in their country (44%, versus 54% of Gen Z) and to agree that men are being expected to do too much to support equality (47%, versus 55% of Gen Z). In Britain, we see the latter but not the former.
Gen Z (45%) and Millennials (44%) are more likely than Gen X (37%) and Baby Boomers (35%) to say they define themselves as a feminist. A similar divide is found in Britain.
Gen Z stand out as most likely to say that in the past year they have spoken up when a friend or family member made a sexist comment (27%, versus 16% of Baby Boomers), a pattern also seen in Britain.
Gen Z are also most likely to say they’ve confronted someone who was sexually harassing a woman (17%, versus 7% of Baby Boomers) – though they are also more likely to have been in these situations in the first place.
https://www.kcl.ac.uk/news/britons-increasingly-scared-to-speak-out-on-womens-rights-data-shows
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