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Alan Alda is loved not because he's sensitive, but because he's successful and sensitive.
Warren Farrell
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Warren Farrell
Age: 81
Born: 1943
Born: June 26
Activist
Author
Civil Rights Advocate
Journalist
Philosopher
Political Scientist
Politician
Sociologist
Writer
Queens
New York
warren farrell
Alan
Sensitive
Loved
Successful
More quotes by Warren Farrell
Every movement has radicals. But the important thing is that the radicals are not the leaders.
Warren Farrell
Men’s greatest weakness is their facade of strength, and women’s greatest strength is their facade of weakness.
Warren Farrell
Men are not only women's unpaid bodyguards, they actually pay to be a woman's bodyguard.
Warren Farrell
Men don't oppress women any more than women oppress men.
Warren Farrell
In brief, we do more research on men in prison, men in the military, and men in general than we do on women for the same reason we do more research on rats than we do on humans.
Warren Farrell
If an employer had to pay a man one dollar for the same work a woman could do for 59 cents, why would anyone hire a man?
Warren Farrell
If a female employee is offended, a boss would like her to tell him, not sue him.
Warren Farrell
Only when a woman shares male risks can she really begin to understand men.
Warren Farrell
If a woman isn't being hazed, she's not being tested therefore, she is not being trusted.
Warren Farrell
I would suggest that just as women who make it in the world of business need male business mentors, perhaps men who make it in the world of emotions will need female emotional mentors.
Warren Farrell
Women's vulnerability confessing their desire to see men as a success object is matched by men's confession of compulsiveness of sexual desire for women.
Warren Farrell
I found that women entrepreneurs earn 50% less than their male counterparts.
Warren Farrell
Choosing safety is a choice of life over career.
Warren Farrell
Throughout my life I have always been amazed that people couldn't listen to other people, that they couldn't hear their best intent, that there seemed to be an enormous need to demonize.
Warren Farrell
When divorces meant marriage no longer provided security for a lifetime, women adjusted by focusing on careers as empowerment. But when the sacrifice of a career met the sacrifices in a career, the fantasy of a career became the reality of trade-offs. Women developed career ambivalence.
Warren Farrell
Without husbands, women have to focus on earning more. They work longer hours, they're willing to relocate and they're more likely to choose higher-paying fields like technology.
Warren Farrell
When a dad admits he is wrong or asks for help, he allows the child to see him- or herself as adequate even when she or he is also wrong. It encourages children to make suggestions and, therefore, to discover their creativity because they have a chance of making a contribution.
Warren Farrell
Men are likely to be quite generous, especially financially.
Warren Farrell
Men are the Rosie-the-Riveters of parenting. They're brought in only when needed, and considered disposable thereafter.
Warren Farrell
On an unconscious level, the demonization of sexuality usually implies the demonization of males and the victimization of females.
Warren Farrell