“I don’t think a woman can handle this job.” That’s a direct quote from a job interview I had in a large city. It was an interview for a position in city government. At the time, I had a bachelor’s degree in political science and a master’s degree in public administration.
My father had just died, I was 24 years old, single, and desperate for a job. It was 1977.
If that happened today
If that happened today, I would come back at the older white male interviewer with a hundred reasons why not only could a woman handle the job but that I was the best-qualified person of any gender for the job.
If it happened today, I’d not only file a lawsuit, I would tell the interviewer it was beneath me to work for a city government that had such low regard for women.
But that was 1977. It was against the law under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 to discriminate in the workplace on the basis of sex, but it was just the way things were and I was too young and desperate for a job to make a fuss about it. I didn’t want to get labeled as a trouble maker before I even started my career in government.
Today is Women’s Equality Day
The 19th Amendment to United States Constitution was passed by Congress on August 26, 1920. It gave women full and equal voting rights.

Women’s Equality Day was first celebrated in 1971 by a joint resolution of the US Senate and US House of Representatives. The resolution was sponsored by US Representative Bella Abzug, a Democrat from New York.
How you can celebrate Women’s Equality Day
Use #EqualityCantWait, #WomensEqualityDay, or related hashtags on social media networks.
Register to vote, if you haven’t already done so.
If there are American children and young people in your life, take time today to seriously speak with them about Women’s Equality Day. Ninety-nine years sounds like a long time to a young person, but try to help them see that in the big scheme of things it really wasn’t so long ago.
The way I would try to explain it to another person is to tell them that my mother was almost eight years old when women won the right to vote. My two grandmothers were 43 and 44 years old when they were allowed to vote for the first time.
Take time to read about one or more of the suffragists who risked their lives in and prior to 1920 in an effort to get the US Government to allow women to vote. Susan B. Anthony is perhaps the most famous suffragist. Others include Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Lucy Stone.
We’ve come a long way, but…
We’ve come a long way since 1920 when the 19th Amendment was passed by Congress, and since 1971 when Women’s Equality Day was first celebrated, and since 1977 when a city’s human resource official said that he didn’t think a woman could handle being that city’s assistant community development director; however, women still have so far to go in the workplace.
Melinda Gates has been vocal recently about the pay gap between men and women in the United States. Some of the statistics she has brought to light are staggering and extremely discouraging.

The World Economic Forum projects that, at the current rate of progress, it will take the United States of America 208 years to reach gender equality. Let that sink in. That’s the year 2227. That’s as long into the future as it has been since the year 1811.
#EqualityCantWait
Melinda Gates posted an EqualityCantWait.net video on LinkedIn on August 6, 2019. Here’s a link to her post on LinkedIn. It includes the five-minute video: https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/heres-why-equality-cant-wait-melinda-gates/.
What about my great nieces?
I have four intelligent great-nieces. They all excel in school. One of them will graduate from college next spring. Another one is a freshman in college. The other two are just several years younger. Their interests are diverse and I can’t wait to see what career paths they take. They can’t wait until the year 2227 to make the same salary as a man.
I don’t want anyone to dare to say to any one of them, “I don’t think a woman can handle this job.” And I don’t want them to work their entire lives and not be paid exactly what their male counterparts are paid. My great-nieces cannot wait 208 years for the United States to reach gender pay equity.
Since my last blog post
I’ve continued to edit and tweak my novel manuscript as I use C.S. Lakin’s Scene Outline Template. I’m about halfway through this stage of the process.
Until my next blog post
I hope you have a good book to read. I’m reading Beneath the Tamarind Tree: A Story of Courage, Family, and the Lost Girls of Boko Haram, by Isha Sesay.
If you’re a writer, I hope you have quality writing time and your projects are moving right along.
Thank you for reading my blog. You could have spent the last few minutes doing something else, but you chose to read my blog.
Let’s continue the conversation
Do you take your right to vote for granted?
Regardless of the country you live in, regardless of your gender, regardless of the color of your skin, regardless of your religion, regardless of your economic status – don’t EVER take your right to vote for granted.
No matter which of those categories you find yourself in, know that people sacrificed and risked their lives to give you the right to right. Many gave their lives in the pursuit of voting rights.
There are thousands of people around the world who still risk their lives to cast their vote. There are millions of people who would be willing to risk their lives just for the opportunity to vote.
Let the children and young people in your life know how important it is for them to register and vote as soon as the law allows them that right and responsibility.
Janet
I once had an interview with a headhunter who was sending me to interview with a client. He said I had a real chance at landing the job. When I asked why he said, “Because women make less than men so they’ll want to hire a woman”. Yeah. Didn’t know enough then to take action. That was more than 20 years ago and it still irks me.
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Hello Janet.
There are people in power in the USA who are all too eager to limit or take away people’s right to vote. It’s a dangerous situation, one that undermines democracy.
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Yes — if we had known then what we know now — or had the spunk then we have now, our lives might have taken another career path. Still irks me, too. I just realized that is the only comment I remember all these years later from all the job interviews I ever had.
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You are absolutely correct.
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Wow, what a great share Janet. Thanks so much.
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Thank you, Laleh! I’m delighted you enjoyed it!
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My pleasure.❤️
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Well said, Janet. Thank you!
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Thanks for the compliment, Kally! Glad you liked my post.
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Very informative post, Janet. We have come a long way but still have more work to be done. Continue to keep us informed.
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Thank you for the compliment, Beverley. Progress is slow but, hopefully, the situation will get better for women around the world.
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You’re most welcome, Janet. Have a fabulous weekend!
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What an amazing post to share. Thanks
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Thank you so much, Rozina! I appreciate it!
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My pleasure 🌷🌷
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This is a post after my heart! When I was 19 I bid into the plant department of a gas company I was working for as a teller. This job required running a 110# jackhammer, working in ditches with tools and heavy lifting. I was put on a crew with two men. I was very fit and strong so I knew I could do the job. The boss at the time, 1978, told the men to break my back. He wanted them to get me to quit. Well, they couldn’t break me. I ended up driving a dump truck, I became a backhoe operator and ended up running my own crew, The boss that said to break my back invited me and my husband to his house to have drinks with his wife and him before a company party one year. I worked there 20 years!
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Wow, Diane! That’s quite a story you have! I had no idea you were a trailblazer. Good for you! Thank you for sharing your experience.
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