The stunning reversal of humanity's oldest bias
Perhaps the oldest, most pernicious form of human bias is that of men toward women. It often started at the moment of birth. In ancient Athens, at a public ceremony called the amphidromia, fathers would inspect a newborn and decide whether it would be part of the family, or be cast away. One often socially acceptable reason for abandoning the baby: It was a girl.
Female infanticide has been distressingly common in many societies and its practice is not just ancient history. In 1990, the Nobel Prize-winning economist Amartya Sen looked at birth ratios in Asia, North Africa, and China and calculated that more than 100 million women were essentially missing meaning that, based on the normal ratio of boys to girls at birth and the longevity of both genders, there was a huge missing number of girls who should have been born, but werent.
Sens estimate came before the truly widespread adoption of ultrasound tests that could determine the sex of a fetus in utero which actually made the problem worse, leading to a wave of sex-selective abortions. These were especially common in countries like India and China; the latters one-child policy and old biases made families desperate for their one child to be a boy. The Economist has estimated that since 1980 alone, there have been approximately 50 million fewer girls born worldwide than would naturally be expected, which almost certainly means that roughly that nearly all of those girls were aborted for no other reason than their sex. The preference for boys was a bias that killed in mass numbers.
But in one of the most important social shifts of our time, that bias is changing. In a great cover story earlier this month, The Economist reported that the number of annual excess male births has fallen from a peak of 1.7 million in 2000 to around 200,000, which puts it back within the biologically standard birth ratio of 105 boys for every 100 girls. Countries that once had highly skewed sex ratios like South Korea, which saw almost 116 boys born for every 100 girls in 1990 now have normal or near-normal ratios.
Altogether, The Economist estimated that the decline in sex preference at birth in the past 25 years has saved the equivalent of 7 million girls. Thats comparable to the number of lives saved by anti-smoking efforts in the US. So how, exactly, have we overcome a prejudice that seemed so embedded in human society?
https://www.vox.com/future-perfect/416809/sexism-girl-preference-sex-ratios-discrimination-ivf
My daughter tells me that the Old Ones say that when many girls are born, it's a sign that peaceful times are coming. I have two great-granddaughters and three great-nieces---no boys. And in my church, the little girls outnumber the boys almost 2:1. That's just two small samples.

Irish_Dem
(71,097 posts)The Chinese were allowed only one child and they wanted a boy, not girls.
So many female infants were killed. The lucky ones were thrown into the street so
the police could place them in orphanages which were full of only little girls.
CBHagman
(17,295 posts)Aside from maintaining familiarity with news reports referencing the preference for boys and the ethical, medical, and demographic concerns there, I haven't been keeping up with the trends. It's a revelation to hear that things are moving back to the normal ratio for births.
marybourg
(13,469 posts)That if their sons had no girls to marry, there would be no daughter-in-law to take care of them in their old age. It wasnt their sons who were taking care of them in their old age. It was their daughters in law.
mopinko
(72,684 posts)niyad
(124,440 posts)misogynist murderers have been screwing up for so long.
One of the things that would be amusing if it were not such poetic justice is tht these insane femicide beliefs and policies have resulted in a lack of available bride and breeding populations. Actions have consequences. oooops!
ret5hd
(21,506 posts)our female overlords!!!