Not sure about others, but I find that these kind of questions are so invasive, ... and so frequent!https://twitter.com/kirstie_j/status/983479020712071169 …
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Replying to @Aman_Badhwar
@kirstie_j@o_guest see I don't think it's inappropriate, I'd have love in many occasions been ask to bring family/my son. The real problem IMO is that I, male, never been asked, while you often are (because women can't live without their kids or something ?)2 replies 0 retweets 1 like -
Replying to @CyrilRPernet @Aman_Badhwar and
I get asked sometimes too (as a male). However, a quick "no" response is taken as just that, with no mentioned of "you will one day" or other such nonsense.
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Replying to @jonxhill @CyrilRPernet and
No hormones are mentioned either, I bet.
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Replying to @jonxhill @CyrilRPernet and
Olivia Guest | Ολίβια Γκεστ Retweeted Olivia Guest | Ολίβια Γκεστ
Also at the end of the day, there's cases where it's illegal to ask.https://twitter.com/o_guest/status/984701674320166912?s=19 …
Olivia Guest | Ολίβια Γκεστ added,
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Replying to @o_guest @CyrilRPernet and
Absolutely. Never seen it asked in formal interview, but what about that postdoc you meet at a conference and then turns up for interview for lectureship. Easier to just not ask in any work setting. Ever.
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Not ask = not ask IF you want to have kids. Not the same as asking how somebody's kids are.
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Basically trying to show the cross purposes here. It's just not the same issue at all.
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