thinkstoomuch wrote:This is an interesting article on Hillary Clinton.
http://www.bbc.com/news/election-us-2016-35526459
Not a problem my limited imagination envisioned.
T2M
USA has a very strict male/female cultural divide.
I believe it is actually easier to "break the (gender-)norms" even in classically "macho" cultures like Italy and Spain, than it is in USA.
To make a very simple comparison of actual facts as a showcase of it, USA has dramatically more pregnancies among its females in military service than anywhere else, including services with more gendermixing.
Several years ago, there was an investigation(that was soon turned "unofficial" and buried as it became too uncomfortable) which found that males were drastically less capable of "acting professionally" if females were part of the same unit, while the females felt group pressure to not reject advances(because then they were by default "frigid bitches", among other things).
Both issues were found to be mostly or completely absent when small comparative reviews were made with a few allied militaries(UK, France and Germany IIRC).
It´s the same thing as with how a voter(BOTH male and female) might respond that they wouldn´t vote for a woman on the basis of "she´s ugly/has weird hair/isn´t a good enough mother or wife/etc(personal reasons suddenly taking precedence or felt more strongly)", reasons for not voting that is drastically less common in regards to male candidates.
This weird prejudice exists in lots of places, but USA has it much stronger than here in W./N. Europe.
Strangely, it is actually stronger than in a few places where women are outright considered 2nd rate people.