âLis Wiehl tells us where the law protects us, and where it is letting us down. And as a bonus she gives us the tools to make change happen! If you care about where we are going, you have to read this book.â âRita Cosby, Emmy Award-winning TV host
Women make up 51% of the American population, yet still arenât treated equally to men in areas that matter most. In this provocative new book, Lis Wiehl, one of the countryâs top federal prosecutors, reveals the legal and social inequalities women must face in their daily livesâand provides a âTool Boxâ for dealing with a variety of issues. From boardroom to courtroom, from pregnancy to contraception, from unequal pay to domestic violence, women are more often than not handed the short end of the stick.
⢠A woman earns seventy-three cents for every dollar a man makes. ⢠The law labels pregnancy a âdisability.â ⢠Domestic violence remains the single biggest threat of injury to women in America. ⢠The federal government continues to increase funding for abstinence-only education, even though itâs proven to put our daughters at greater risk for unwanted pregnancies and sexually transmitted diseases. ⢠Health insurance plans are more likely to cover Viagra prescriptions than birth control pills.
Whatâs worse, weâre also weighed down by a myriad of troubling attitudes: The media bombard us with images of young, perfect-bodied women; acid-tongued commentators label us âfeminaziâ if we try to claim equal treatment; and the current chief justice of the Supreme Court has a history of opposing legislative and legal attempts to strengthen womenâs rights, and questions âwhether encouraging homemakers to become lawyers contributes to the common good.â
Why are powerful women viewed with consternation while powerful men instill respect? Why is it that for every ten men in an executive, decision-making role in this country, there is only one woman in that same role? Why do our federal courts continue to be stacked with male judges even though women receive more than half of all law degrees? And why shouldnât a woman be president?
Enough! Women are not equal in our society or under our laws and the remedy is quite simple: Besides being the majority of the population, we also control the economy, spending 80 percent of every discretionary dollar, and given that 54 percent of voters are female, we can swing an election. With our numbers we can do something about it.
This is a critical moment: We can either take the road toward equality or allow ourselves to be driven further away from fair treatment. The 51% Minority is a clarion call to the silent majority to take a stand . . . before itâs too late.
âLis Wiehl tells us where the law protects us, and where it is letting us down. And as a bonus she gives us the tools to make change happen! If you care about where we are going, you have to read this book.â âRita Cosby, Emmy Award-winning TV host
Women make up 51% of the American population, yet still arenât treated equally to men in areas that matter most. In this provocative new book, Lis Wiehl, one of the countryâs top federal prosecutors, reveals the legal and social inequalities women must face in their daily livesâand provides a âTool Boxâ for dealing with a variety of issues. From boardroom to courtroom, from pregnancy to contraception, from unequal pay to domestic violence, women are more often than not handed the short end of the stick.
⢠A woman earns seventy-three cents for every dollar a man makes. ⢠The law labels pregnancy a âdisability.â ⢠Domestic violence remains the single biggest threat of injury to women in America. ⢠The federal government continues to increase funding for abstinence-only education, even though itâs proven to put our daughters at greater risk for unwanted pregnancies and sexually transmitted diseases. ⢠Health insurance plans are more likely to cover Viagra prescriptions than birth control pills.
Whatâs worse, weâre also weighed down by a myriad of troubling attitudes: The media bombard us with images of young, perfect-bodied women; acid-tongued commentators label us âfeminaziâ if we try to claim equal treatment; and the current chief justice of the Supreme Court has a history of opposing legislative and legal attempts to strengthen womenâs rights, and questions âwhether encouraging homemakers to become lawyers contributes to the common good.â
Why are powerful women viewed with consternation while powerful men instill respect? Why is it that for every ten men in an executive, decision-making role in this country, there is only one woman in that same role? Why do our federal courts continue to be stacked with male judges even though women receive more than half of all law degrees? And why shouldnât a woman be president?
Enough! Women are not equal in our society or under our laws and the remedy is quite simple: Besides being the majority of the population, we also control the economy, spending 80 percent of every discretionary dollar, and given that 54 percent of voters are female, we can swing an election. With our numbers we can do something about it.
This is a critical moment: We can either take the road toward equality or allow ourselves to be driven further away from fair treatment. The 51% Minority is a clarion call to the silent majority to take a stand . . . before itâs too late.