Have We Come a Long Way, Baby?
An author’s blog, www.basilandspice.com asked me to write a posting related to women and leadership. Of course I couldn’t resist the opportunity to get the word out that I believe we live in a time when women’s leadership is not just needed, it’s essential if we want to save the world from war, famine, random acts of violence, corporate greed, etc. But an interesting thing happened as I was writing it. I found myself becoming angrier and angrier at just how hard it really is to get women’s voices to the leadership table. Polls conducted last year indicated that America was more ready for an African American president than a woman. If you take a look at the polls today it seems they were right. Only 33% of men voted for Hillary in the primaries. Then I thought about the Supreme Court, founded in 1790. That’s 218 years and we can’t do better than one woman and one person of color on a court that decides which laws apply to a mult-cultural society? I won’t even quote the numbers of women on corporate boards and in CEO positions — we all know how lousy those figures are. What’s a woman to do? She’s to make her voice heard by courageously challenging the status quo. If we aren’t part of the solution, we’re part of the problem. I’m not suggesting that we make better leaders than men, but I do know we make different leaders. For too long we’ve bought into the nonsense that what makes us different makes us less effectual in leadership roles. Oh yeah? Tell that to Golda Meir, Margaret Thatcher, Meg Whitman, Indira Gandhi, Wilma Mankiller, and Rosa Parks. Just remember this — every time you back down because someone suggests you’re being too emotional, too aggressive, not aggressive enough, or not qualified because you’re a woman you collude with a system that wants to maintain status quo (that’s what a system is — something that perpetuates itself). The only possible reason why people would want to hold you back or keep you quiet is because you’re right — and baby, that means you’re powerful. It’s like I told the guy on line behind me in Trader Joe’s the other day who was making nasty remarks about my Hillary for President cap (it was a bad hair day): I don’t care if Hillary or Obama wins the election — anyone but another old white man.
TAGS: Hillary Clinton, Supreme Court, women and power, women leaders









