That said, one thing I do notice is that guys have WAY better conversations. ..
I'm sitting in class eavesdropping because that's just me, and two guys are having this fascinating discussion on the timespace continuum and some interesting concepts. (Wish I had joined in. Some of their information was faulty.)
I turn instead to the girls talking to the right of me, and all I hear is
I can't BELIEVE she's dating him again... *sniffle*
Meh. I guess it's more just the people you're talking to. I guess I don't hang out with shallow/surface people whether they are men OR women, so I tend not to hear that garbage... although I actually do not mind relational conversation... not the sort of backbiting you are describing, but serious discussion of relationships... which I'll get more of from women.
Men do tend to delve into esoteric topics far earlier than women, and in early adulthood when a lot of women are running a household and raising kids while the men further their careers and make more income, men have more TIME to think about such things and explore them and it often aligns with their work. In my opinion, moms (esp those working part-time + being mom) tend to be far more drained than dads in that same bracket, so if conversation ends up being about practical issues, family matters, or surface level socializing, I don't blame them.
So basically yeah, guys take more risks and are further rewarded developmentally. Their interaction is different and allows them to test and sharpen their wit, whereas females are inately cautious and more likely to avoid controversial topics unless they are guaranteed their audience will agree.
I agree that men seem slanted more to challenge and push things, while women generally are more assigned the role of "relational stabilizer" and thus can't really afford to destabilize a situation by arguing various POVs. With guys, too, it's more about independently exploring one's strength/autonomy and achieving impersonal goals that are important to them; with women, there's more focus on maintaining the social/relational net, which demands far more diplomacy and compromise.
Still, the OP suggest men are better?
One question though; What gave men the chance to claim the dominant role in the first place? Why isn't men the gender that now has to be offered equality?
If we were equal, I believe we naturally would have developed a gender equal society in all areas. It wouldn't have to be forced.
it is a valid point. If it were equal, it probably wouldn't have unbalanced so naturally.
To me, it's just because men are more assertive/driven. They enjoy dominating, wielding strength, pushing themselves, thrusting themselves against the environment. To me, that is part of biological makeup.
Women (under estrogen-driven development) are the peacekeepers, the stabilizers, the nestbuilders, the more cautious... We're tailored to be this way. It's not a matter of inferiority, but basically men end up in dominant positions because it matters more to them and aligns more with their natural biological development; it's not as important to women in their roles as facilitators, stabilizers, peacemakers, etc.