Tuesday, May 29, 2012

Women aren't equal to men ?



After many years of fighting for equality women still get paid less than men for doing the same type of jobs.


Quote from a 2010 "Time" magazine study .. "Last year's tax returns may already be signed, sealed and delivered, but April 20 is the day the average American woman will finally finish earning her 2009 salary — at least, the one she would have received if she were a man. That's because U.S. women still earned only 77 cents on the male dollar in 2008, according to the latest census statistics. (That number drops to 68% for African-American women and 58% for Latinas.) To highlight the need for change, since 1996 the National Committee on Pay Equity, an advocacy-group umbrella organization, has marked April 20 as Equal Pay Day. There are some signs of progress: the first bill Barack Obama signed into law as President targeted the U.S. pay gap, and the Senate is considering a bill that is meant to address underlying discrimination. But the question remains: Why has it taken so long? Nearly half a century after it became illegal to pay women less on the basis of their sex, why do American women still earn less than men?
The answer depends on whom you ask — and so does the size of the gap. Some say 77% is overly grim. One reason: it doesn't account for individual differences between workers. Once you control for factors like education and experience, notes Francine Blau — who, along with fellow Cornell economist Lawrence Kahn, published a study on the 1998 wage gap — women's earnings rise to 81% of men's. Factor in occupation, industry and whether they belong to a union, and they jump to 91%. That's partly because women tend to cluster in lower-paying fields. The most-educated swath of women, for example, gravitates toward the teaching and nursing fields. Men with comparable education become business executives, scientists, doctors and lawyers — jobs that pay significantly more."

Tuesday, May 22, 2012

Stereotypes


Mexicans mow lawns. Indians smell like curry. Africans are dumb. All African American girls wear weave. All Jews love pennies.  All Jamaicans smoke weed. Chinese are all book worms. There are hundreds of stereotypes out there. Some of them hold truth, others are lie. Stereotypes are often used with the intent to hurt only certain groups of people. I personally don’t like being stereotyped but I will admit that I have done it.

Which stereotypes do you think are truthful? Is it even fair to stereotype? Have you ever been stereotyped?

Tuesday, May 15, 2012

Racism Allowed ?

Two girls from Gainesville, Fla posted a nearly 14-minute-long racist rant on YouTube. They insulted many races from African Americans, to Mexicans, to Native Americans. In return they got a lot of negative comments and some death threats. A lot of people were very much offended by their comments. I personally agree with the comments they were making about African Americas but i don't believe they were in the right to say it.


What do you think? Did you see the video? Were their comments accurate?


Original Video http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CAR2h5aSQO4 

Tuesday, May 8, 2012

Racism.... Google Style

What does this picture symbolize to you? Discrimination? Racial profiling? Racism?

Wednesday, May 2, 2012

To Fat To Party ?

Recently twenty-one-year-old Jordan Ramos was denied access to a club because the bouncer informed her she was to fat, and wasn't pretty enough to dance in the club. The bouncer of the club also rudely remarked that Jordan looked pregnant. Do you think that its fair that she was not allowed in because of her size? Should plus size people be excluded from other events?


(Full story http://www.theroot.com/buzz/plus-sized-student-discrimination-bar )

Tuesday, May 1, 2012

Racial Profiling : Treyvon Martin


Racial Profiling has become a very serious issue that needs to be publically more often. In America many law officials have been accused of racial profiling when it comes to identifying possible suspects. In recent events a young African American male was killed by an older male named George Zimmerman. George claimed he saw a black male with a hoodie on walking in his neighborhood and he looked suspicious.
Detailed Accounts From ABC News – “Police recordings made the night a self-appointed neighborhood watch captain allegedly shot and killed an unarmed 17-year-old boy outside his stepmother's home sent the boy's mother screaming from the room and prompted his father to declare, "He killed my son," according to a family representative.
The series of emergency and non-emergency calls to police depict the apparent progression of events on Feb. 26 that led to the watch captain, George Zimmerman, 28, who is white, allegedly shooting Trayvon Martin, a high-school junior who is black, as the teen made his way home with a bag of Skittles and a can of iced tea.
On one call to a non-emergency dispatch number, according to Julison, Zimmerman says, "He's checking me out," and then, "This guy looks like he's on drugs, he's definitely messed up."
"There's a real suspicious guy. This guy looks like he's up to no good, on drugs or something," Zimmerman can be heard telling the dispatcher.
"These a**holes always get away," he adds.
The dispatcher is heard trying to discourage Zimmerman, asking, "Are you following him?.. Okay, we don't need you to do that."
Within minutes, however, 911 calls are being made to police reporting the two are fighting.
"They're wrestling right in the back of my porch," one frantic caller says. "The guy's yelling help and I'm not going out."
On a second call someone's screams for help can be heard and what sounds like two gunshots.
On one call to a non-emergency dispatch number, according to Julison, Zimmerman says, "He's checking me out," and then, "This guy looks like he's on drugs, he's definitely messed up."
"There's a real suspicious guy. This guy looks like he's up to no good, on drugs or something," Zimmerman can be heard telling the dispatcher.
"These a**holes always get away," he adds.
The dispatcher is heard trying to discourage Zimmerman, asking, "Are you following him?.. Okay, we don't need you to do that."
Within minutes, however, 911 calls are being made to police reporting the two are fighting.
"They're wrestling right in the back of my porch," one frantic caller says. "The guy's yelling help and I'm not going out."
On a second call someone's screams for help can be heard and what sounds like two gunshots.
On one call to a non-emergency dispatch number, according to Julison, Zimmerman says, "He's checking me out," and then, "This guy looks like he's on drugs, he's definitely messed up."
"There's a real suspicious guy. This guy looks like he's up to no good, on drugs or something," Zimmerman can be heard telling the dispatcher.”