A study in Social Science Quarterly found that attractiveness in adolescence boosts social mobility, particularly for men, impacting their education, occupation, and income more than for women. This overlooked factor shows significant influence on future success.
ugh can we please not start posting psypost in !science@lemmy.world? its bad enough that they were allowed to be spammed over at reddit. its almost always half-cocked crocks of shit trying to make a story fit a narrative.
This so much this. I’m sick of “woe is me” incels complaining about problems caused by toxic masculinity, then they proceed to blame women
This has nothing to do with women and all to do with attractiveness bias that affects both men and women. Just because it could possibly affect men more than women does not negate that women are severely affected by this as well.
I don’t think awareness of this bias is a bad thing.
Their primary issue was with the source and whether this is the right sub for it
I’d be pretty careful about drawing any conclusions that are too broad from this study when trying to compare the female vs male experience, for a multitude of reasons.
The least of which being that while the splay might be slightly larger for men, the overall social mobility is higher than women. This is to say, unattractive males still have higher social mobility than unattractive women.
In the case for economic mobility specifically, even the ugliest men have more social mobility than the most beautiful women.
So, sure, it might (big asterisk) be the case that being attractive plays a larger role in social mobility for men than it does for women…
… But simply being a man, according to this data, still places one statistically heads and shoulders above being a woman for social mobility.
So… Yeah… The reason people are wary about studies like these is that they’re incel honey. We recognize them as being extremely easy to draw terrible and unsupported conclusions from. That doesn’t intrinsically make them bad, it just makes people want to nip those obvious misconceptions in the bud.