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MESSAGE FROM LILY = A WOMAN WHO FOUGHT FOR ALL WOMEN
posted at January 29, 2012 5:23 PM EST
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Posts: 12532
First: February 29, 2008 Last: May 17, 2013 |
Some of you may have heard my story. In 1998, after 19 years of service at a Goodyear factory, someone left an anonymous note in my mailbox listing the names and salaries of my male coworkers -- who I learned that day were making at least 20 percent more than I was, even though many had less education, less training, and fewer years on the job. I went to court and won, but in an appeal, the Supreme Court claimed I should have filed my complaint within six months of the first unfair paycheck. Of course, they didn't say how I was supposed to fight for fair pay when I didn't know I was being paid unfairly. But that's not why I'm writing you. I'm writing because President Obama heard about my case and went to work fighting for legislation that would prevent his two girls, and an entire generation of young women coming up in the workforce, from ever being disrespected in the same way. The Lilly Ledbetter Fair Pay Act became the first piece of legislation he signed into law as president, exactly three years ago today. Before he was elected, the President said he'd fight for middle-class people like me, and he kept his promise -- not just on fair pay, but on so many other issues that matter to women. That's why I'm part of Women for Obama. President Obama didn't have to make fair pay a priority. Lord knows he had enough to worry about those first few weeks in the White House. But the President is driven by a strong sense of fairness, and the responsibility he believes we have to one another to correct injustice wherever we can. Part of that comes from his own story. The President's grandmother worked in a bank her whole life, and kept working there long after she hit the glass ceiling. Some of the very men she had trained climbed the corporate ladder ahead of her. That's part of why he continues to fight for bills like the Paycheck Fairness Act, which he supported in his State of the Union last week. And it's what drove him to fight for the Affordable Care Act -- which ended discrimination against women based on pre-existing conditions, and is providing free preventive services like mammograms and contraception. Growing up in the South, I learned the value of a good day's work at a young age, picking and chopping cotton two seasons a year. It wasn't until much later that I learned that hard work isn't always enough when folks don't have a president who's looking out for them. I'm excited to fight alongside President Obama in this election. Thanks, Lilly |
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Re: MESSAGE FROM LILY = A WOMAN WHO FOUGHT FOR ALL WOMEN
posted at January 30, 2012 10:39 AM EST
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Posts: 535
First: August 9, 2011 Last: May 24, 2013 |
Jan, Some people seem to think they have all of the answers until they really live the problem then they find out how difficult it really is to get a fair deal. If you talk to some people there is no hunger in this country, there is no health care problems in this country, there is no discrimination against women, there is no discrimination against races, there is no income inequality, there is no discrimination against disabled, there is all of this and more. Let them live the problem and they will know. n Response to MESSAGE FROM LILY = A WOMAN WHO FOUGHT FOR ALL WOMEN: Some of you may have heard my story. In 1998, after 19 years of service at a Goodyear factory, someone left an anonymous note in my mailbox listing the names and salaries of my male coworkers -- who I learned that day were making at least 20 percent more than I was, even though many had less education, less training, and fewer years on the job. I went to court and won, but in an appeal, the Supreme Court claimed I should have filed my complaint within six months of the first unfair paycheck. Of course, they didn't say how I was supposed to fight for fair pay when I didn't know I was being paid unfairly. But that's not why I'm writing you. I'm writing because President Obama heard about my case and went to work fighting for legislation that would prevent his two girls, and an entire generation of young women coming up in the workforce, from ever being disrespected in the same way. The Lilly Ledbetter Fair Pay Act became the first piece of legislation he signed into law as president, exactly three years ago today. Before he was elected, the President said he'd fight for middle-class people like me, and he kept his promise -- not just on fair pay, but on so many other issues that matter to women. That's why I'm part of Women for Obama. President Obama didn't have to make fair pay a priority. Lord knows he had enough to worry about those first few weeks in the White House. But the President is driven by a strong sense of fairness, and the responsibility he believes we have to one another to correct injustice wherever we can. Part of that comes from his own story. The President's grandmother worked in a bank her whole life, and kept working there long after she hit the glass ceiling. Some of the very men she had trained climbed the corporate ladder ahead of her. That's part of why he continues to fight for bills like the Paycheck Fairness Act, which he supported in his State of the Union last week. And it's what drove him to fight for the Affordable Care Act -- which ended discrimination against women based on pre-existing conditions, and is providing free preventive services like mammograms and contraception. Growing up in the South, I learned the value of a good day's work at a young age, picking and chopping cotton two seasons a year. It wasn't until much later that I learned that hard work isn't always enough when folks don't have a president who's looking out for them. I'm excited to fight alongside President Obama in this election. Thanks, Lilly Posted by JANMB |