Tough For Men

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Life is Tough for Men
Research question: Is it harder to be a man?
Is life for men really not the cakewalk that it seems to be? In recent discussions of sexism, a controversial issue has been whether it’s more difficult being a man or woman. On one hand, some argue that men have it worse with things like the law, supporting families, being the “tough guy” etc. On the other hand, however, others maintain that women have the worst of it. My own view strongly agrees that the male population doesn’t have it as easy as we think. According to Lorenzo Jensen from Thought Catalog “ We come last—after women and children.” Not only do men have to get drafted into war, but when there is danger in the country, men are expected to fight and be saved last. …show more content…

Redditor dr-doc-phd said, “The hardest part about being a man is not being able to admit when you need help, leaving him feeling "unwanted" and "disposable." According to the American Foundation for Suicide Prevention, the suicide rate has been about four times higher for men than women for more than a decade.” Because men feel like they can’t express their sadness or show anyone how they’re truly feeling, they keep it deep inside and sometimes it becomes too much. The Suicide Gap says that, “Suicide is often thought of as a gender-neutral issue, but in reality, it’s a problem that affects men far more than women. More men are dying from suicide than from car accidents.” Society expects men to be heroic and strong all the time, but for some, it’s too much to ask. They feel that it wouldn’t be manly to reach out for help, or show someone they need …show more content…

“When a man and a woman commit the same crime the man will most times receive a harsher sentence and be assumed the initiator if the man and woman were partners in crime.” A man and woman can commit the same crime, but the man will get the harder, longer sentence. Sonja Starr, an assistant law professor at the University of Michigan, ran a study of this. The study found that, “Men receive sentences that are 63 percent higher, on average, than their female counterparts.Starr also found that females arrested for a crime are also significantly more likely to avoid charges and convictions entirely, and twice as likely to avoid incarceration if

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