No. Read the article. The complaint has nothing to do with ‘the number’ of scholarships geared towards women. It has to do with the fact of any scholarship at all being offered exclusively to women. There could be only three of such a thing in the US, and the litigious fellow from the American Enterprise Institute that we talked about before would still attempt to remove them.doubtingthomas wrote: ↑Mon Mar 27, 2023 9:46 pmBut there are about ten times more scholarships exclusively for women, that's the problem. If it was about the same, then Forbes wouldn't have reported this https://www.forbes.com/sites/kimelsesse ... 594fd97fe2
Here’s what you should be trying for, to start:
1. Provide data for scholarship availability for women or men exclusively, or both.
2. Provide data on total dollars available from each scholarship, or for men or women candidates exclusively, for comparison,
3. Provide data that demonstrates that availability of any given scholarship for a woman subsequently causes a male to either (1) not graduate from high school, (2) not enroll in a 2- or 4-year institution, or trade school, and (3) not graduate from any post-secondary schooling that they may have enrolled into.
I’ll put a pot o’ coffee on while you gather these up.