I wasn't inquiring about all questions or questions in general.  I was asking about that specific question.  Which is why I bolded 'the' in above. To draw your attention.
		
		
	 
No, I do not think that specific question is a genuine question. It's a rhetorical device.
	
	
		
		
			She's drawing attention to a radically unhinged idea---and here I thought you were saying she was promoting it.
		
		
	 
I said that's 
the least she's doing, that's the 
absolute minimum that any reading of the text would lead you to. That's what your reading leads you to.
But my reading of the text is that she's advocating it.
	
	
		
		
			And why is it so 'radically unhinged?'  In fact, it was done at one of the most prominent news organizations in the world.
		
		
	 
It's an idea built on false foundations, it is sexist, it creates mistrust, it violates distributive justice, it does nothing to address the problem.
	
	
		
		
			What is so 'radically unhinged?'  Generally, there is a fixed amount of money available to be used for compensation for various workers.  If there is an unfair distribution, how should it be redressed, if that pot of money doesn't increase?  Because it doesn't always increase.
		
		
	 
What makes you think an unequal distribution is unfair?
	
	
		
		
			It seems rational to me.  Also math literate.  I thought you'd be a fan.
Then you say that she's got her political speak on and is being mealy mouth and hedging her bets.  How does that go with advocating for something that is radically unhinged?  It seems quit contradictory to me.
		
		
	 
Being mealy-mouthed is only possible when you have a position but are too afraid to own up to it fully.
	
	
		
		
			Also not what I claimed.  Isn't it possible to write an article discussing--I see you are backing away from your claim that she was advocating for this idea--without being solidly and firmly and whole heartedly on one side or the other?
		
		
	 
I'm not backing away from the claim.
	
	
		
		
			Clearly you land hard on the side of hemming and hawing.  In the example that was the foundation for Valenti's article, Abramson was management. She did find that there were unfair compensation practices at the NYT and she took direct action to correct it.  Are you suggesting she needed to ask a man for permission?
		
		
	 
Yes, that's exactly what I'm suggesting. That she 'gets permission' from a 'man' -- presumably 
any man, her husband, her father, the homeless guy on the street - to do it.
Holy fucking shit, Toni. Just when I think you can't get more absurd you start to tread Valenti territory.
The entirety of what Valenti's article describes is:
	
	
		
		
			Over the weekend, former New York Times executive editor Jill Abramson – fired in part, she says, over conversations about pay disparity – told a reporter that the best way for newsroom leaders with a limited budget to fix salary inequalities is to “bring the guys down to give a little more to the girls”.
“I did that at The Times. No one’s happy to get a cut, but too bad.”
		
		
	 
It does not say that Abramson found 'unfair compensation'. Anywhere. All it says is that she cut men's salaries to increase women's.
	
	
Too fucking right, 'wow'.
	
	
		
		
			Wait a minute:  You were saying that she was an avid supporter
		
		
	 
Fuck your putting words in my mouth. I said she advocated it. If she were an avid supporter her words wouldn't be so mealy-mouthed.
	
	
		
		
			of this radical unhinged idea.  How does that fit in with being 'mealy mouthed?' If one can use that term properly for the written word.  
You seem confused. And also biased:  mealy mouthed is not a term I've ever heard you use regarding something a man wrote.  Nor is 'radically unhinged.'  Loren is indeed your soul mate.
		
		
	 
You're right -- because you've never seen me write 'mealy-mouthed' before, and I use it once to describe a mealy-mouthed article, that's enough to establish to sexist bias on my part.
I wish you were trolling me, Toni.
	
	
		
		
			How do you know what she means?  So far, your interpretation skills have been pretty unimpressive.
		
		
	 
Because words have meanings. Tell me, what do 
you think 'temporarily unrealistic' means, if not what I suggested?
	
	
		
		
			However, I do also hope that in the future, people will be fairly compensated without regard to their gender instead of white men getting a boost because....that's how it's always been.
		
		
	 
And you have evidence of this happening?
I'm a white man. Do you think I'm getting unfairly compensated?
	
	
		
		
			My preferred action would be to increase the pot of money available to use for compensation.  That is not always realistic.
There is another point though:  I can see that you think it would be unfair to take something away from men to improve the conditions of women who have been unfairly compensated.
		
		
	 
i) Establish that the compensation is unfair. Inequality does not mean unfair. You'll have to show more than inequality. (Indeed, 
equality of incomes could be unfair).
ii) Establish that the unfairness was because all men got a 'gender boost' unrelated to their merit, at the expense of women.
iii) Address the hiring and promotion practices that led to the unfairness
iv) Take away from men the portion of their salary that is unfairly given to them due to gender bias, and 
show your work.