Is anyone surprised that this thread is dominated by men, whose only response is to complain that its unfair that this article addresses women only? Not only is the complaint crass, but it avoids discussing the article's thesis at all.
If we can't recognize that women face different and more pressure around the issue of work/children balance than men do, then sexism isn't dead yet.
It's not so much unfair as...perplexing. The article seems to imply that women will be happier placing more emphasis on family, but at the moment the mean-time-working-women-spend-with-their-families is greater than mean-time-working-men-spend-with-their-families; stay-at-home moms outnumber stay-at-home dads by approximately a bajillion to one.
In other words, if there is a bunch of free happiness to be gained by emphasizing family more, addressing that advice to women _in particular_ seems...inefficient.
"Is anyone surprised that this thread is dominated by men, whose only response is to complain that its unfair that this article addresses women only? "
Is that a complaint about it being unfair that it's women only? I don't see it. This is not the only response of the men in this thread, stop generalising. If you have a problem with specific posts then why not answer them?
If we can't recognize that women face different and more pressure around the issue of work/children balance than men do, then sexism isn't dead yet.