@tizh, it does alter the overall point. taking the optimal set of data to push the article's bias is ridiculous. the sample chosen was "cases where women work more than men". with this set, the result was 50-50.
what about the rest of the data? where men work more than women, where there is unemployment, where one parent is unempliyed, where there are equal working hours etc.
most likely was not 50-50 so was left out. in fact, the article actually PROVES discrimination against men in child custody cases. since the parent which works the most working hours usually LOSES the case. so how is it 50-50 lol
(yes i know it can be argued that time spent and working hours shouldnt play a role but it does)
what about the rest of the data? where men work more than women, where there is unemployment, where one parent is unempliyed, where there are equal working hours etc.
most likely was not 50-50 so was left out. in fact, the article actually PROVES discrimination against men in child custody cases. since the parent which works the most working hours usually LOSES the case. so how is it 50-50 lol
(yes i know it can be argued that time spent and working hours shouldnt play a role but it does)