In 1647, Alse Young of Windsor, Conn., was the first person to be executed for witchcraft in what would become the United States. She was 47, a dangerous age, given that many people prosecuted for witchcraft were middle-aged women.
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surpassed that of the u.s. but as a recent report notes, almost 32% of prime age female workers in japan are part-time. compare that to 18% of female workers in that same age group in the united states. and less than 5% of japanese men. so why is this happening? d d disdiscrimination. japanese women complain of being on a mommy track instead of a work track. part of the problem is japan s work culture which is notoriously punishing and characterized by long hours. many women who want children think they cannot have career track work. look at the amount of time japanese women spend in unpaid labor. close to four hours per day. and japanese men, just 41 minutes. the lowest among all oecd countries. if japan were able to match
it s hard to get there on. once you re there the stress is incredible. plus once you grow older your decisions on life choices may change. you have children and all the rest, yes. this is interesting. the widest gap between men and women among generation x, which would be age 33 to 48, 17% more men than women want to be the boss. what s the deal? well, you think about that age group, 33 to 48. most women have their children during that time. they have dependent children. even if they don t go completely on the mommy track and stay as a stay-at-home mom, most women take off some time, they look for flexible hours and/or working from home, and that really can side track from you if you re going to go be a ceo, you have to be straightforward all the way there. so i think that s why there is that difference. there s some great we