Sunday, September 23, 2012

Talking Points #4


The Big Question:
Why/how is economic inequity a feminist issue?
As you think about issues of social class and economic injustice, why do you think that feminists would take these issues up? What makes money and class a "feminist issue?"

Websites:
PEOPLE LIKE US
CENTER FOR WORKING-CLASS STUDIES

“Class can be harder to spot than racial or ethnic differences, yet in many ways it's the most important predictor of what kind of financial and educational opportunities someone will have in life.” -People Like Us

“At the CWCS, we see class as based on a combination of factors -- what kind of work people do, how much they earn, their social and economic power, their education, lifestyle, and culture.  We also recognize that class is closely related to race, gender, religion, and other social categories.
Class shapes the lives of individuals as well as the policies of our society.  For individuals, class affects not only whether you go to college, but also where you go and how well prepared you are to succeed.  It also shapes attitudes about work, community, and our expectations for ourselves and our children.” -Center For Working-Class Studies

    In the website titled, People Like Us, a women named Roberta shares a story with us about how the issue of class has affected her life personally. In the story she tells us about a young man, named Ben, who she falls in love with. Roberta and her family were considered to be in a higher class than he and his family were and she explains in her story that the night Ben brought her home to meet his family, they debated on whether or not he had become more “uppity like his girlfriend”. Ben’s family began to think that he thought he was better than his family because he was now with a girl whose family was in a higher class than they were. Roberta’s story interested me because I have seen this within some relationships, whether it is on television, in school, or at home within conversations between my friends and or family members. I feel as though family members will talk about a new friend you bring home to introduce to the family if he/she is in a lower or higher class than they are because they feel less comfortable not having that in common. If your friend is in a higher class, they may think that your friend is too snobby or bratty to hang out with you. If your friend is in a lower class, they may think that your friend is not good enough to hang out with you.
    I also went along to read a story about Charles, who also shares a story with us about how the issue of class has affected his personal life. Charles was a son of a “prominent surgeon” who was expected to attend medical school like his father, two brothers and younger sister because he too was intelligent, handsome, and attended private schools. As a sophomore at Stanford University, Charles decided to drop out in order to live a different life. Today he works as a house painter, living in a “double-wide trailer” with his wife, who is in fact now a K-mart cashier, and his three children earning no more than $25,000 a year. What is a little bothersome is that he then mentions that his parents never went to go visit him. They obviously did not agree with his life decisions, because he could have been living a wealthier life. Although becoming a doctor could have brought a lot of money in for him and his family, it was not sufficient enough in terms of what would make him feel happy. He clearly chose his happiness over his earnings. His parents should have not let their beliefs get in the way of visiting their child because just as his parents had their standpoint on a career, Charles had his own as well. Charles parents’ were living a much wealthier lifestyle than he was and while it did not bother him, it clearly bothered his parents.
    Economic inequality has to do with the difference in wealth and in income between or within groups of people or individuals in a population. Economic inequality is a feminist issue that would be taken on by feminists because they are just simply people who believe in campaigning, advocating, fighting, and pushing for women’s equal rights. Men and Women, a lot of the time, do not get paid the same to perform the same task. That right there itself raises an issue for feminists to fight for because for a company to determine pay based on one’s gender is not an equal right. It is not ok for a woman to get paid less because of her gender and it is not okay for a man to get paid more based on his gender. Is it only fair to get paid more or less based on things like the skills you are to perform while at work, how hard one works, and time employed, for example.
    As I went on to research more about gender based income, I came across the National Committee on Pay Equity (NCPE), and learned that women in 2011, went from earning 77.4 percent in 2010, to earning 77.0 percent of what men were earning. In an article titled, Shortchanged: Why Women Get PaidLess Than Men, by Peter Coy and Elizabeth Dwoskin, the authors state “in many workplaces, discussing pay is frowned upon; in some, it’s a dismissible offense. So, like Ledbetter, women often don’t know when they’re getting paid less than men. So they don’t complain. So the problem continues.” Men and women do not go around comparing each other’s incomes, so it is not easy to tell whether a company is paying them more or less based on their gender, for doing the same job.




1 comment:

  1. The story about Roberta, and how you were saying that youve seen this happen when friends go over friends houses reminds me of a Boy Meets World episode that was on on Thanksgiving...I am assuming here that you have seen Boy Meets World, when I probably shouldn't. But anyways Sean brings his best friend Corey and coreys family over to has trailer for Thanksgiving dinner and both sets of parents are very uncomfortable with the situation and even say to each other that some people just cant be friends. The whole trailer park community even gets together to tell Seans father that it is not ok to bring people that are better then them into their community to look down upon them. It's all very sad that people are judged by what they have and what they can afford.

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