Way Beyond Barbie

Don’t be deluded by pink fever — the world is woman’s stage far beyond a Barbie fantasy flick.  A billion dollars earned in short order by a film — and its female director — ought not divert from the daily worldwide stage for women’s talents, prominence, and contributions. In an era when some, mostly in red states with a male dominated legislature, are seeking to return women to their place and status — barefoot and pregnant — without reproductive rights or access to modern medicine.

Let’s refresh ourselves and celebrate the modern, real world, where women are esteemed for motherhood, building homes, securing families as well as for leading in the UN, in federal court, on the field, on the balance beam, at GM, Citigroup and CVS to name a few.

First of August, Linda Thomas-Greenfield became President of the UN Security Council focusing on food security as worldwide starvation escalates. U.S. District Court Judge Tanya Chutkan oversees the United States vs Donald J. Trump case alleging Trump attempts to overturn the 2020 presidential election; Magistrate Judge Moxila Upadhyaya presided at Trump’s arraignment.

Janet Yellen, U.S. Treasury Secretary, led a delegation for relationship building with treasury officials in China where a major staff turnover had occurred as Chinese economic growth declined. Six of 15 U.S. Cabinet Secretaries are women.

Simone Biles, four-time Olympic champion, returned to competition from a self-initiated gymnastic hiatus this week winning a major event on her way to the Paris Olympics. The U.S. Women’s Soccer team lost by a millimeter in the 2023 World Cup semi-finals having previously won four titles and four Olympic golds. The American men’s team was in the 1930 semi-finals and in one quarterfinal since 1990.

In business, Mary Barra last month shocked the world announcing GM’s future strategy isn’t electric vehicles but hydrogen fuel cells — a fuel source not dependent on scare elements, a fuel whose ultimate emission is water. In 1972 Katherine Graham became the first Fortune 500 female CEO at the Washington Post. Fifty-three women today lead a Fortune 500 firm — from zero to 11%.

In Congress, Rosa DeLauro and Jahana Hayes are two of Connecticut’s five Representatives where 128 women are 29% of the House membership (short on women by at least 90) and 25% of the U.S. Senate. Twelve women are Governors and 95 women hold state executive positions.

Women in 2023 are 50.5% of the U.S. population.

Ohio voters this August positioned their state to join Montana, Kansas, Kentucky, Vermont, Michigan and California in statewide referendums to assure women health rights and access — the rich voice of the majority.

Joyfully, there is only forward momentum — no reverse for women’s achievements nor a desire to repress others on their journey — no Barbieland required.

 

“Women are leaders everywhere you look — from the CEO who runs a Fortune 500 company to the housewife who raises her children and heads her household. Our country was built by strong women, and we will continue to break down walls and defy stereotypes.”

—Nancy Pelosi

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