Because you don't see the whole picture; in Japan, China, Taiwan and Singapore (the traditional 'Oriental Confucianist' societies), in a divorce the woman gets half and has no liabilities thereafter. The man normally ends up paying the remaining tab — childcare and education, support and maintenance — even if the woman was working and earned more than they. In fact, there was a landmark case where the judge ruled that maintenance should be ZERO because the woman was earning 10x more than the man and it didn't seem right that the man should be paying maintenance. Things like that. There is legislation specifically designed to enforce women's rights but not men's rights—so in effect, the law protects women and the much less 'enforceable' social contract is supposed to say what men ought to get. So in a legal sense, 'boobs means having more legal rights'.SpunkySix wrote:I don't see why that's YMMV. By definition, it isn't equality. Why should having boobs mean having less rights?Mirage_GSM wrote:Actually, that's the way it's handled in many "traditional" Japanese families.I grew up in a conservative family in which my grandfather would work all day, while grandma would go shopping and do the groceries. All his pay went to her, and she banked it or invested it as she saw fit, and then gave him an allowance from it.
Women might not have equal opportunities in Jobs in Japan, but in the households the men still often defer to them for decisions.
Do they have exactly the same rights and options in every situation? No.
Can it be called equality? Ymmv.
And again, if your definition of equality is 'equal rights to do whatever you want within the constraints of the law', then yeah, women have it better.
EDIT: complete parity+ (i.e. women's rights) enacted in Japan 1986 (better late than never), and in Singapore 1961 (historically not so bad, considering it became fully independent only in 1965).