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28 votes
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Paternity leaves in Finland have nearly doubled in length after a 2022 reform of the parental leave system, the social benefits agency has said
13 votes -
Iran: undressing protest shows how women are still fighting even as morality laws get harsher
21 votes -
The world's most feminist city – how Umeå in Sweden became an idyll for women
7 votes -
Takeaways from AP's report on affordable housing disappearing across the US
37 votes -
The big question touching a nerve this election: "Can my husband find out who I am voting for?"
55 votes -
Isle of Dogs [area in London's Docklands] unilateral declaration of independence: a revolt, a joke, or a tactical stroke of genius
11 votes -
Swedes take a new step in parental leave. Grandparents can now get paid to take care of grandkids.
31 votes -
Mexico elects first female president − but will that improve the lot of country’s women?
23 votes -
Patriarchy according to the Barbie movie
9 votes -
The Day Iceland Stood Still | Trailer
8 votes -
George Monbiot comes face to face with his local conspiracy theorist
12 votes -
American non-compete clauses could become a thing of the past thanks to a new ruling
15 votes -
How Chinese students experience America
23 votes -
How do you feel about student loan forgiveness?
The debate is coming back up because of new talks around student loan forgiveness in the US. I was on the fence about it until I did some extra research for a comment I posted last week. I am...
The debate is coming back up because of new talks around student loan forgiveness in the US. I was on the fence about it until I did some extra research for a comment I posted last week.
I am including the comment I posted last week that was from a discussion about whether general education classes should be required for a college degree, but the part about the societal value of a college graduate to the US is relevant.
Higher education is an interesting thing to put a price on because while some classes can provide economic benefits to people who get a higher education, many classes provide more of a societal benefit.
A history class doesn't help an engineer make a jet turbine, but it can help them be an informed voter. College campuses mix people of different races, genders, origins, and socioeconomic classes with each other. The general education courses expose students to different concepts that can help them in their civic lives.
College graduates also have many economic benefits to society. On average, college graduates pay much more in taxes than they take in government benefits over their lifetimes. High school graduates also contribute, but only a modest gain where college graduates contribute 4-5x what they take. Governments invest $28,000 per college student on average but gain $335,000 in net monetary benefit over their lifetime.
I get that many people are opposed to courses that don't directly apply to a career because they have to pay a lot of money out of pocket when the course may only provide a benefit to society. Why can't the government provide loan forgiveness to anyone who graduates? It would take pressure off students and still provide a net benefit to society over having them not graduate.
50 votes -
The dark reality of Japanese host clubs
10 votes -
The rise and fall of the trad wife: Alena Kate Pettitt helped lead an online movement promoting domesticity. Now she says, “It’s become its own monster.”
39 votes -
US President Joe Biden just signed the largest executive order focused on women’s health
23 votes -
Indian government to impose ban on import, sale, and cross-breeding of twenty-three ferocious dog breeds
15 votes -
Denmark's tough laws on begging hit Roma women with few other options – the Roma minority are heavily discriminated against across Europe
21 votes -
On International Women's Day, Northern European countries stand out for women who are looking to develop their careers – Iceland secured the top spot
3 votes -
Denmark has pledged to put up more statues of women, with the country's culture minister saying the capital has “more statues of mythical beasts and horses”
12 votes -
The 24-hour city: In a push to bolster nightlife, cities are changing laws to keep bars, restaurants and transit systems operating round-the-clock
34 votes -
Days of darkness: How one woman escaped the conspiracy theory trap that has ensnared millions
32 votes -
Families find ways around Taliban restrictions on girls’ education
15 votes -
Goodbye to the era of the professional spouse – There are not many jobs left in which people are expected to appear, smiling and waving, by their partner’s side
12 votes -
Doing your own research is a good way to end up being wrong
23 votes -
German right wing extremists strategically purchase rural land
23 votes -
San Francisco and Grants Pass Oregon lawsuits about homelessness highlight this question: Do those who reject shelter choose homelessness?
16 votes -
The red US state brain drain isn’t coming. It’s happening right now.
77 votes -
Finland's government has cited security concerns for the closure of all border crossings with Russia – Russian-speaking Finns say their rights are being violated
24 votes -
Links forged half a century ago with Gaza City mean that support for Palestine goes well beyond gesture politics in Tromsø, Norway
8 votes -
Sweden halts adoptions from South Korea after claims of falsified papers on origins of children
10 votes -
Jezebel and the question of women’s anger
33 votes -
Ontario to ban Canadian work experience requirement in job postings
17 votes -
Sweden's schools minister Lotta Edholm aims to limit the profit-making ability of friskolor/free schools in her plans for education reform
8 votes -
Mike Johnson's 'porn monitoring' remarks spark US national security concerns
47 votes -
Denmark aims a wrecking ball at ‘non-Western’ neighborhoods
42 votes -
A vast northern European project is underway to combat isolation by promoting inclusion – we take a look at the results in Norway
9 votes -
PM Katrín Jakobsdóttir will take part in Iceland's first full-day womens strike in forty-eight years – calling for pay equality and action on gender-based violence
12 votes -
Broken zipper? France will pay to get it fixed
16 votes -
The war in Ukraine is heightening tensions between Russians and Norwegians living on Svalbard | Focus on Europe
8 votes -
Atlanta’s ‘Cop City’ neighbors have no voting rights to stop it
19 votes -
Without a college degree, life in America is staggeringly shorter
21 votes -
Is multiculturalism bad for women? (1997)
6 votes -
Pennsylvania Senator John Fetterman introduces legislation to cancel school lunch debt
77 votes -
Women used to be more likely to vote Conservative than men but that all changed in 2017—UK research wants to find out why
17 votes -
Professionals in Sweden are pushing back hard against a rightwing plan to make them snitch on undocumented migrants
23 votes -
Queensland neighbours show how Voice to Parliament is splitting Australia
2 votes