{"id":166651,"date":"2026-01-21T06:35:46","date_gmt":"2026-01-21T14:35:46","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/lukeford.net\/blog\/?p=166651"},"modified":"2026-01-21T07:35:23","modified_gmt":"2026-01-21T15:35:23","slug":"lat-college-women-far-outnumber-men-in-law-medical-vet-schools","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/lukeford.net\/blog\/?p=166651","title":{"rendered":"LAT: College women far outnumber men in law, medical, vet schools"},"content":{"rendered":"<p><A HREF=\"https:\/\/www.latimes.com\/california\/story\/2026-01-20\/women-far-outnumber-men-in-law-medical-vet-schools-why-this-matters\">The Los Angeles Times reports<\/a>: <\/p>\n<blockquote><p>Officials from associations of graduate and professional schools who are trying to recruit more men said the gender shift can be self-perpetuating. Men may be put off by what they see as the \u201cfeminization\u201d of professions in which they now are the minority, research by the veterinary medical colleges association concluded.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cI\u2019m not seeing a national effort to say we need to change this,\u201d Buchmann said. \u201cIf anything, the opposite is true.\u201d<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>As women move into the majority within fields like law and medicine, these professions take on a different cultural identity. This transformation often signals to young men that a career path no longer fits traditional masculine norms. Social scientists refer to this as the feminization of a profession. It happens when the presence of women reaches a certain threshold, often leading to a perception that the work involves more emotional labor or less prestige.<\/p>\n<p>Research from the American Association of Veterinary Medical Colleges shows that men frequently exit applicant pools when they perceive a field as female-dominated. In veterinary medicine, the disparity is particularly sharp. Women make up roughly 80% of current students. When prospective male students look at clinics like the Heal Veterinary Clinic in Watertown, they see an all-female staff. This visual and cultural shift reinforces the idea that the profession belongs to women.<\/p>\n<p>National statistics highlight the breadth of this change across various disciplines:<\/p>\n<p>Field of Study\/Current Female Enrollment\/Graduation Percentage<br \/>\nVeterinary Medicine 80%<br \/>\nPsychology (Doctoral) 75%<br \/>\nOptometry 70%<br \/>\nPharmacy (Master&#8217;s) 66%<br \/>\nLaw (JD Degrees) 56%<br \/>\nMedicine (MD) 55%<br \/>\nDentistry 55%<\/p>\n<p>Men who might consider graduate school often choose the immediate financial returns of trades or labor-intensive jobs instead. They see the rising cost of professional degrees as a high-risk investment. A medical degree now costs an average of $297,745 at public universities and $408,150 at private ones. Many men decide the debt is not worth the entry into a profession where they feel like outsiders.<\/p>\n<p>Claudia Buchmann points out that there is no coordinated national strategy to address the male enrollment decline. While many programs exist to support women in STEM, few initiatives specifically target men for health or legal careers. Most current efforts happen at the local level. Deans try to reach down into undergraduate programs to find male candidates, but they face a shrinking pool. Since men now earn only 40% of bachelor\u2019s degrees, the pipeline to graduate school is narrow from the start.<\/p>\n<p>This imbalance threatens the long-term stability of higher education. Universities rely on the $20 billion in annual revenue generated by master&#8217;s programs. If men continue to opt out of the system, colleges cannot sustain their current scale. The shortage of male professionals may hurt service delivery. The medical community already projects a shortage of 124,000 physicians by 2034. <\/p>\n<p>The flight of men from spaces where they become the minority\u2014is often called identity dissonance or gendered occupational flight.<\/p>\n<p>When a profession or educational path reaches a certain &#8220;tipping point&#8221; of female representation, the cultural perception of that field often changes. For men, this shift impacts their sense of belonging, status, and professional identity.<\/p>\n<p>Sociologists note that for many men, professional identity is closely tied to traditional markers of masculinity, such as economic leadership, competitiveness, and technical authority. When a space becomes female-dominated, men may experience a conflict between their masculine identity and their professional role.<\/p>\n<p>In many societies, professions associated with women are culturally devalued or seen as lower status. Men often selectively leave occupations like pharmacy or veterinary medicine as the number of women increases to avoid this perceived loss of status.<\/p>\n<p>Men in female-dominated fields like nursing or elementary education often face a unique social pressure. They may be celebrated by female colleagues as a &#8220;diversity hire&#8221; who raises the field&#8217;s status, yet they often feel socially isolated or face suspicion from the public (e.g., the &#8220;predator by assumption&#8221; stereotype in childcare).<\/p>\n<p>To manage this dissonance, men who remain in these spaces often engage in &#8220;boundary work.&#8221; They might emphasize the most &#8220;masculine&#8221; parts of the job\u2014such as the physical demands, the leadership aspects, or high-stakes crisis management\u2014to distance themselves from the &#8220;feminine&#8221; label.<\/p>\n<p>Recent data from the University of Zurich suggests that men are twice as likely to leave a &#8220;feminizing&#8221; occupation compared to an identical one with fewer women. This isn&#8217;t necessarily about a lack of ability, but a lack of fit.<\/p>\n<p>Stopgappers enter female-dominated fields but leave quickly because the social pressure to appear ambitious or competitive feels unmet in those environments. The glass escalator serves as a counter-trend where men in these professions find themselves fast-tracked into management or leadership roles. This phenomenon often occurs as a way to restore a traditional masculine hierarchy within the workplace. Occupational flight describes a broader trend where men move toward sectors that maintain a masculine culture, such as the trades, engineering, or technology. In these spaces, men feel that society more readily accepts their competitive nature.<\/p>\n<p>The shift in workplace culture with a higher percentage of women is not usually something men like, such as moving from &#8220;plain speaking&#8221; and &#8220;aggressive competition&#8221; to &#8220;conflict resolution&#8221; and &#8220;fussy HR departments.&#8221; For men, these new norms feel like a removal of the tools they naturally use to navigate the world.<\/p>\n<p>Research indicates that men often thrive in environments where performance is explicitly ranked and rewards are tied to individual &#8220;wins.&#8221; When a space shifts toward communal goals and collaborative harmony, some men perceive it as a space where their specific talents for &#8220;agentic&#8221; (action-oriented) leadership will not be recognized or rewarded.<\/p>\n<p>This self-perpetuating cycle means that as fewer men enter these schools, there are fewer male mentors and peers, making the space feel even more &#8220;uninviting&#8221; to the next generation of men.<\/p>\n<p>As the sexual balance shifts toward a female majority, the underlying &#8220;software&#8221; of a profession\u2014the unspoken rituals, communication styles, and methods of conflict resolution\u2014undergoes a distinct transformation. These changes are often described through the lens of shifting from agentic (individualistic and assertive) to communal (collaborative and empathetic) norms.<\/p>\n<p>In male-dominated environments, communication often functions as a tool for establishing hierarchy and competence. Arguments are frequently seen as a &#8220;sport&#8221; or a way to vet ideas through friction. As women become the majority, the &#8220;texture&#8221; of professional speech changes:<\/p>\n<p>There is often a move away from absolute, declarative statements toward more &#8220;inclusive&#8221; language. This involves using qualifiers (e.g., &#8220;I feel like,&#8221; or &#8220;Does that make sense?&#8221;) which prioritize the comfort of the listener and the preservation of the relationship over a &#8220;win-loss&#8221; exchange.<\/p>\n<p>The physical flow of meetings often changes. Instead of a single person holding the floor until interrupted, a &#8220;circle-back&#8221; culture emerges where leaders ensure everyone has spoken. This can extend the length of meetings but aims to ensure a total consensus.<\/p>\n<p>The social rituals that glue a workforce together also transform. In traditional &#8220;old boys&#8217; club&#8221; settings, bonding often occurs through shared risk or external activities like golf or late-night drinking. In feminizing spaces, these rituals often move indoors and become centered on &#8220;life-work integration&#8221;:<\/p>\n<p>Validating the personal lives and emotional states of colleagues becomes an explicit part of the job. In a law firm or vet clinic with a female majority, &#8220;catching up&#8221; on personal news is not seen as a distraction from work but as a prerequisite for a functional team.<\/p>\n<p>Direct, heated confrontations\u2014common in high-stress, male-dominated environments\u2014are often replaced by a &#8220;conflict resolution&#8221; model. Issues are handled through HR-mediated conversations or private, diplomatic interventions. For men who prefer the &#8220;clear the air&#8221; style of a quick, loud argument, this can feel like navigating a &#8220;passive-aggressive&#8221; maze.<\/p>\n<p>The &#8220;heroic&#8221; leadership model\u2014the lone captain making a definitive call\u2014often gives way to distributed leadership.<\/p>\n<p>In professional environments where men form the majority, leadership often follows a top-down model. Decisions appear decisive and lean on a philosophy where the buck stops at the desk of a single leader. These spaces handle conflict through direct friction and a meritocratic approach that favors a survival of the fittest mentality. Mentorship in these circles typically functions as sponsorship based on perceived potential or shared hobbies outside of the office.<\/p>\n<p>As a profession shifts toward a female majority, leadership norms move toward a consultative and consensus-based style. Success depends on achieving buy-in from the group rather than making a unilateral call. Conflict becomes a relationship-preserving process managed through mediation and diplomatic interventions. Mentorship also changes, focusing on coaching that prioritizes whole-person development and empathy.<\/p>\n<p>In fields like surgery or trial law, the &#8220;hazing&#8221; rituals of the past\u2014long hours, sleep deprivation, and aggressive questioning by superiors\u2014are being dismantled. These rituals were designed to test &#8220;mettle&#8221; and &#8220;toughness.&#8221; As these professions feminize, the focus shifts toward &#8220;sustainability&#8221; and &#8220;well-being.&#8221; While this reduces burnout, it also removes the specific &#8220;battle-hardened&#8221; identity that many men find rewarding in high-stakes professions.<\/p>\n<p>When men observe these cultural changes, they don&#8217;t necessarily see them as &#8220;bad,&#8221; but they may find them alien. The environment stops feeling like a &#8220;playground&#8221; where they can compete and instead feels like a &#8220;classroom&#8221; or a &#8220;sanctuary&#8221; where their natural social impulses (like competitive banter or bluntness) are treated as &#8220;unprofessional&#8221; or &#8220;toxic.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>Performance reviews in a male-majority environment often function as a scoreboard. Feedback tends to be blunt and centers on specific, measurable wins or failures. In these settings, a manager might tell an employee exactly where they fell short without much preamble, viewing the exchange as a necessary friction to sharpen performance. The session feels like a debrief after a game. Men in these spaces often walk away knowing exactly where they stand in the hierarchy, as the focus stays on the &#8220;agentic&#8221; output of the individual.<\/p>\n<p>When women move into the majority, the performance review transforms into a holistic conversation about professional growth and team harmony. The manager often frames critiques within a &#8220;sandwich&#8221; of positive reinforcement to preserve the relationship and the employee&#8217;s morale. This approach prioritizes &#8220;soft skills&#8221; and emotional intelligence, often evaluating how well a person collaborates rather than just their individual output. For someone used to the scoreboard style, this can feel vague or even confusing, as the primary goal is to maintain a &#8220;communal&#8221; atmosphere where everyone feels supported.<\/p>\n<p>The physical setting and the &#8220;tempo&#8221; of the workplace also shift as these norms take hold. You see fewer spontaneous, high-stakes debates in the hallways and more scheduled, moderated discussions. The &#8220;plain speaking&#8221; that characterizes many male-dominated fields is replaced by a more careful, curated form of professional &#8220;diplomacy.&#8221; This environment minimizes the risk of social fallout and creates a predictable, stable climate. However, for those who find energy in the &#8220;rough and tumble&#8221; of direct competition, the new atmosphere can feel quiet or even stifling.<\/p>\n<p>The term &#8220;gender&#8221; gives me the willies. <\/p>\n<p>While sex refers to biological categories, the term gender describes the social and cultural expectations that society places on men and women. For someone like me who views these categories as rooted in biology, the modern emphasis on gender as a social construct feels like an attempt to untether identity from reality.<\/p>\n<p>This linguistic shift often coincides with the &#8220;sanitization&#8221; of the workplace. In male-majority spaces, the focus tends to remain on objective tasks and hard data, where &#8220;sex&#8221; is often treated as a simple demographic fact. As these spaces feminize, the conversation moves toward &#8220;gender identity&#8221; and &#8220;gender norms,&#8221; which introduces a layer of sociological complexity. This focus on how people feel and how they are perceived within a social hierarchy changes the &#8220;vibe&#8221; of a professional environment. It moves the center of gravity away from what a person is and toward how a person experiences their role.<\/p>\n<p>For many men, this transition feels like a move toward a more &#8220;managed&#8221; or &#8220;engineered&#8221; social environment. The introduction of &#8220;gendered&#8221; language often brings with it new HR protocols and a heightened sensitivity to communication styles. This can create a sense of walking on eggshells, where the &#8220;plain speaking&#8221; of the past is replaced by a more curated vocabulary. When the term &#8220;gender&#8221; replaces &#8220;sex&#8221; in professional data and discussions, it often signals that the environment has adopted the communal, relationship-preserving values that now dominate many professional schools.<\/p>\n<p>In the novel <A HREF=\"https:\/\/en.wikipedia.org\/wiki\/Atlas_Shrugged\">Atlas Shrugged<\/a> by Ayn Rand, the world\u2019s most productive individuals\u2014the &#8220;men of mind&#8221;\u2014disappear from a society that increasingly demands they sacrifice their achievements for the sake of the collective. They retreat to a hidden valley called Galt\u2019s Gulch, leaving the &#8220;motor of the world&#8221; to stop.<\/p>\n<p>Applying this to the modern scene creates a picture of a &#8220;Quiet Shrug.&#8221; Unlike the novel, where the exit is a coordinated strike, the modern version is an unorganized, individual drift. Men see the rising costs of entry and the changing social architecture of professional life and simply decide not to participate. They don&#8217;t leave society entirely; they just leave the institutions that no longer feel like home.<\/p>\n<p>Imagine a bright student who once would have aimed for a career in surgery or high-stakes litigation. He looks at the debt required and the &#8220;feminized&#8221; landscape of the modern professional school\u2014the focus on consensus, the moderated speech, and the administrative focus on emotional labor. He feels like a &#8220;porous&#8221; self being forced into a mold that doesn&#8217;t fit his &#8220;buffered&#8221; identity. Instead of fighting for a seat at a table where his natural competitive drive might be labeled as toxic, he disappears into the digital economy.<\/p>\n<p>He becomes a ghost in the traditional system. You might find him running a solo consulting business from a laptop, trading high-frequency crypto, or moving into a specialized trade where the &#8220;plain speaking&#8221; of men remains the standard. He chooses a path where he can be an &#8220;agentic&#8221; force without a committee overseeing his tone. In this modern Galt\u2019s Gulch, the &#8220;men of mind&#8221; are not hiding in a valley; they are hiding in plain sight, working in niches where they can compete and produce without navigating the new &#8220;diplomacy&#8221; of the professional class.<\/p>\n<p>The result is a thinning of the ranks in the very institutions that sustain the public infrastructure. As the &#8220;shrugging&#8221; continues, law firms, clinics, and universities find themselves with a surplus of consensus and a shortage of the specific, aggressive drive that historically pushed those fields through high-risk crises. The motor doesn&#8217;t stop with a bang; it loses its high-end torque. The &#8220;feminization&#8221; of the professional world becomes a self-fulfilling prophecy because the men who would have provided the counter-balance have already walked away.<\/p>\n<p>To what extent have no-fly zones contributed to the male exodus from the professions?<\/p>\n<p>The concept of <A HREF=\"https:\/\/lukeford.net\/blog\/?p=166575\">epistemic no-fly zones\u2014areas of inquiry or discourse that are socially or professionally off-limits<\/a>\u2014plays a significant role in the unorganized &#8220;shrugging&#8221; of men from the professions. When certain topics become sacralized and immune to critique, the environment shifts from one of open, meritocratic friction to one of high-stakes social navigation.<\/p>\n<p>For many men, this transition creates a fundamental mismatch between their natural professional impulses and the new institutional requirements.<\/p>\n<p>In a traditional male-majority professional setting, &#8220;plain speaking&#8221; and rigorous, even aggressive, debate are often the primary tools for vetting ideas. When no-fly zones are established, these tools are effectively confiscated.<\/p>\n<p> No-fly zones require individuals to &#8220;curate&#8221; their thoughts through a filter of social consequences before speaking. This adds a layer of cognitive and emotional labor that men, who often prefer &#8220;buffered&#8221; and direct communication, find taxing or unnecessary.<\/p>\n<p>In fields like law or academia, the penalty for crossing into a no-fly zone is no longer just a lost argument; it is a reputational or career-ending event. This shift makes the &#8220;high-stakes playground&#8221; of the profession feel like a minefield. Many men decide the &#8220;return on investment&#8221; for their ambition is not worth the risk of a single misstep in a moderated environment.<\/p>\n<p>The impact of these no-fly zones is not just that men stop talking; it\u2019s that they leave the &#8220;regulated&#8221; space entirely. This is the modern Atlas Shrugged scenario:<\/p>\n<p>Men are moving toward niches where these no-fly zones do not yet exist or are irrelevant. This includes the independent digital economy, specialized trades, and private consulting. In these spaces, they can return to &#8220;agentic&#8221; behavior\u2014making decisions, taking risks, and speaking plainly\u2014without a committee overseeing their vocabulary.<\/p>\n<p>If a man feels that his promotion or status depends more on his ability to navigate social taboos (&#8220;diplomacy&#8221;) than on his technical skill (&#8220;output&#8221;), his motivation to stay in that system drops. He looks for environments where the &#8220;scoreboard&#8221; is objective and the rules of engagement are clear.<\/p>\n<p>The exodus of men who refuse to navigate no-fly zones leads to a cultural feedback loop. As these men leave, the remaining professional body becomes even more committed to consensus-based, relationship-preserving norms. This reinforces the no-fly zones, making the field even less attractive to the next generation of competitive, blunt-speaking men.<\/p>\n<p>This &#8220;Quiet Shrug&#8221; means that the most disruptive, high-torque thinkers\u2014the ones who often drive innovation by challenging established dogmas\u2014are the first to walk away. They are not hiding in a valley; they are building their own worlds where the &#8220;no-fly&#8221; rules don&#8217;t apply.<\/p>\n<p>No-fly zones serve as the invisible fence that accelerates the male exodus. When a professional or academic environment establishes certain topics as sacralized and immune to critique, it fundamentally changes the &#8220;terms of service&#8221; for those within it. For men who view professional life as a meritocratic arena for the &#8220;men of mind&#8221;\u2014to use the Atlas Shrugged terminology\u2014these zones signal that the environment has shifted from one of objective output to one of high-stakes social compliance.<\/p>\n<p>In medical and law schools, no-fly zones often manifest as a narrowing of the curriculum. Academic freedom has increasingly become a contested concept, with recent data showing that a majority of students at elite institutions like Harvard and Columbia would now prevent controversial speakers from stepping foot on campus.<\/p>\n<p>In medical education, certain biological realities or evidence-based debates\u2014particularly around pediatric gender medicine or racialized health algorithms\u2014have become so politically charged that they are often removed from formal instruction to avoid administrative backlash. For a student who values the &#8220;buffered&#8221; pursuit of scientific truth, seeing a university suspend a course because it challenges a specific ideology feels like a breach of the professional contract.<\/p>\n<p>In law schools, the traditional &#8220;Socratic method&#8221;\u2014which relies on aggressive, blunt-speaking debate\u2014is being replaced by a culture of self-censorship. When 53% of students report that topics like the Israeli-Palestinian conflict or transgender rights are too sensitive for open discussion, the &#8220;high-torque&#8221; debate that men often find rewarding is effectively banned.<\/p>\n<p>Men often perceive these no-fly zones as a &#8220;compliance tax&#8221; on their ambition. If the path to becoming a top surgeon or a senior partner now requires navigating a &#8220;passive-aggressive&#8221; maze of HR-moderated language and DEI litmus tests, the &#8220;return on investment&#8221; changes.<\/p>\n<p>When a field prioritizes &#8220;diplomacy&#8221; and &#8220;relationship-preservation&#8221; over raw technical output or intellectual friction, it begins to lose its masculine-coded prestige. Men who would have historically fought for a seat at the table see these new norms as &#8220;pink-washing&#8221; the profession, making it appear less like a battleground and more like a managed sanctuary.<\/p>\n<p>In an environment of high-stakes social navigation, a single &#8220;unvetted&#8221; thought can lead to social cancellation or professional exile. Many men decide that rather than walking on eggshells for forty years, they will simply &#8220;shrug&#8221; and move to the unregulated spaces of the digital or solo-entrepreneurial economy.<\/p>\n<p>The exodus is most visible in the drift toward sectors that maintain a &#8220;masculine&#8221; culture\u2014the trades, engineering, and independent digital ventures. In these spaces, no-fly zones are rare because the &#8220;scoreboard&#8221; is purely objective. If a man builds a successful software product or a high-end construction firm, his personal views on &#8220;sacralized&#8221; topics don&#8217;t prevent his code from working or his buildings from standing.<\/p>\n<p>The traditional institutions are left in a self-perpetuating cycle: as the &#8220;buffered,&#8221; competitive men leave, the no-fly zones expand, making the space even more uninviting to the next generation. The &#8220;motor of the world&#8221; hasn&#8217;t stopped, but it has moved to a different, less regulated neighborhood.<\/p>\n<p>The data on independent digital platforms reveals a mirror image of the decline in traditional graduate enrollment. While men are leaving the structured, &#8220;feminized&#8221; institutions of higher education, they are moving in significant numbers into decentralized economic spaces that prioritize technical skill and direct market competition over institutional credentials.<\/p>\n<p>The creator economy is currently valued at roughly $250 billion and is expected to nearly double to $480 billion by 2027. While women lead the way in total number of creators\u2014making up roughly 64% of the market\u2014male creators earn 40% more per collaboration on average. This suggests that men are moving into the high-end, technical, or specialized niches of the digital world where &#8220;agentic&#8221; output is rewarded most heavily.<\/p>\n<p>As graduate enrollment in fields like computer science dropped by 14% in late 2025, the number of independent creators grew by 14%. Many men are bypassing the four-year degree to gain qualifications through self-study and &#8220;learning-by-doing.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>Research shows that in the gig and creator economies, traditional educational credentials have limited use. Instead, review systems and previous job experience serve as the primary signals of competence. For men who dislike the &#8220;managed&#8221; social navigation of modern universities, this objective &#8220;scoreboard&#8221; is a major draw.<\/p>\n<p>The exodus is not just about where men are going, but what they are leaving behind. As professional degrees in healthcare and education are increasingly reclassified or seen as female-dominated, men are moving toward &#8220;unregulated&#8221; sectors like crypto-trading, independent consulting, and digital manufacturing.<\/p>\n<p>The Wage Premium of Autonomy: 44% of freelancers report earning more than they did under a traditional employer. For men, the perception of &#8220;financial freedom&#8221; and &#8220;professional development&#8221; is significantly higher in these independent roles than in traditional jobs.<\/p>\n<p>Men now account for only 40% of undergraduate enrollment. They are 7 percentage points more likely to drop out than women, often citing the lack of value in a degree and the desire to begin earning immediately. This movement toward immediate, unvetted wage-earning is a modern form of the productive class leaving a system that no longer fits their identity.<\/p>\n<p>The shift toward independent digital platforms acts as a release valve for men who find traditional professional environments increasingly &#8220;managed.&#8221; As law and medical schools adopt consensus-based norms and enforce intellectual no-fly zones, many men are moving into decentralized economic sectors. These spaces\u2014spanning high-end software development, decentralized finance (DeFi), and solo-entrepreneurial consulting\u2014prioritize &#8220;agentic&#8221; output and objective results over the diplomatic social navigation required in modern institutions.<\/p>\n<p>Software development remains a primary destination for men seeking a meritocratic &#8220;scoreboard.&#8221; While general software roles are feminizing in terms of culture, men are concentrating in high-torque, technical niches.<\/p>\n<p>Specialized fields like cybersecurity, AI development, and systems architecture (using languages like Rust and Go) are growing 25% faster than general roles. These areas reward individual problem-solving and technical &#8220;brilliance&#8221; rather than collaborative consensus.<\/p>\n<p>Men engage in IT entrepreneurship at twice the rate of women. In the world of tech startups, the &#8220;founder&#8221; identity remains heavily masculine, focused on risk-taking and revolutionary product ideas. This environment offers a modern &#8220;Galt\u2019s Gulch&#8221; where men can build entire systems without the oversight of &#8220;fussy&#8221; HR departments.<\/p>\n<p>Decentralized finance (DeFi) has become a major alternative for men who feel alienated by the transparency and slow innovation of traditional banking.<\/p>\n<p>In crypto-trading, the feedback loop is immediate and binary: you either profit or you lose. This objective ranking appeals to men who dislike the &#8220;sanitized&#8221; feedback found in professional performance reviews.<\/p>\n<p>Men aged 25\u201334 have the highest rate of crypto ownership at 16.2%, nearly double that of women in the same age bracket. Overall, men are significantly more likely to trust decentralized systems over national banks, which many perceive as being bogged down by bureaucratic and social agendas.<\/p>\n<p>Independent consulting grew by 6.5% in 2024, reaching nearly 28 million people globally. Men are increasingly choosing to be &#8220;boutique&#8221; consultants rather than climbing the corporate ladder at the &#8220;Big Four&#8221; firms.<\/p>\n<p>Autonomy over Compliance: By working as a solo practitioner or in a small &#8220;pod,&#8221; a man can avoid the institutional &#8220;no-fly zones.&#8221; He can speak plainly with his clients and provide &#8220;fresh ideas&#8221; that a larger, more cautious firm might veto.<\/p>\n<p>The Wage Premium of Exit: Freelancers in technical and consulting niches often report higher earnings and greater professional satisfaction than their counterparts in traditional roles. For a man who values &#8220;buffered&#8221; independence, the trade-off of less stability for more &#8220;agentic&#8221; freedom is an easy choice.<\/p>\n<p>This drift creates a thinning of the &#8220;high-torque&#8221; talent in traditional institutions. Law firms and medical schools find themselves with plenty of people who can navigate a consensus-based meeting, but they are losing the &#8220;disruptors&#8221; who would have historically challenged the status quo. These men are not hiding; they are simply building their own &#8220;valleys&#8221; in the digital economy where the no-fly zones of the physical world don&#8217;t apply.<\/p>\n<p>As the most competitive men &#8220;shrug&#8221; and move to these unregulated digital valleys, law and medicine are left with a surplus of social harmony but a deficit of the aggressive, risk-taking energy that often drives breakthrough innovation.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>The Los Angeles Times reports: Officials from associations of graduate and professional schools who are trying to recruit more men said the gender shift can be self-perpetuating. Men may be put off by what they see as the \u201cfeminization\u201d of &hellip; <a href=\"https:\/\/lukeford.net\/blog\/?p=166651\">Continue reading <span class=\"meta-nav\">&rarr;<\/span><\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"om_disable_all_campaigns":false,"_monsterinsights_skip_tracking":false,"_monsterinsights_sitenote_active":false,"_monsterinsights_sitenote_note":"","_monsterinsights_sitenote_category":0,"footnotes":""},"categories":[16281],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-166651","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-college"],"aioseo_notices":[],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/lukeford.net\/blog\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/166651","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/lukeford.net\/blog\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/lukeford.net\/blog\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/lukeford.net\/blog\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/lukeford.net\/blog\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fcomments&post=166651"}],"version-history":[{"count":13,"href":"https:\/\/lukeford.net\/blog\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/166651\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":166680,"href":"https:\/\/lukeford.net\/blog\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/166651\/revisions\/166680"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/lukeford.net\/blog\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fmedia&parent=166651"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/lukeford.net\/blog\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fcategories&post=166651"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/lukeford.net\/blog\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Ftags&post=166651"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}