don t tell michelle. this is not just rhetoric. this is about actual legislation and policies that we could put into practice. i introduced the paycheck fairness bill in 1997. it is 2014. you first introduced this paycheck fairness in 1997? america need to grow up. be in the 21st century. it needs to pay a fair day s wage for a fair day s work. who is going to admit they were eating donuts on the bus? they voted to repeal obama care 15 times. we, we can do this. and when it succeeds? america succeeds. and joining me is chris cal
have other names for us. i can t tell you the number of times i have been called the b word. we should all wear it as a a medal of honor. bah th because that suggests we are willing to go the extra mile to get something done. don t tell michelle. this is not just rhetoric. this is about actual legislation and policies that we could put into practice. i introduced the paycheck fairness bill in 1997. it is 2014. you first introduced this paycheck fairness in 1997? america need to grow up. be in the 21st send schcentury. it needs to pay a fair day s wage for a fair day s work. who is going to admit they were eating donuts on the bus? they voted to repeal obama
our society. sparked, in part, by articles like this memorable cover story in the atlantic. and both like lean in and thrive. so now journalist claire shipman and katty kay have a new theory of what is holding women back. they examine what seems to be a simple truth women suffer from an acute lack of confidence. they write, compared with men, women don t consider themselves as ready for promotions, they predict they ll do worse on tests, and they general le underestimate their abilities. a growing body of evidence shows just how devastating this lack of confidence can be. which also begs the question about the structural and cultural issues that teach and reinforce a lack of confidence. consider the conversation about paycheck fairness. blocked by conservatives in congress sending a message that women don t deserve equal pay. when fx news hosts blamed the ills of society on women with children out of wedlock. even at the time when the most
. of and in the pretenders tonight, watered down. marsha blackburn, the tennessee congresswoman ran off to new hampshire, the big circus this weekend. blackburn spoke at the freedom summit in manchester, and according to her aide, oh, tested the waters on a presidential run. something really must be in the water in new hampshire. bla blackburn believes she has a shot in 2016. marsha blackburn wants change in the white house, but she can t even get behind change in congress. here s what she had to say about paycheck fairness. we re all for equal pay. i would love for women to be
whether we re talking to democrats or republicans, a room full of democrats, a room full of republicans, it is stunning how the same speech goes over the same exact way and you have people nodding their head at the same lines and laughing at the same jokes. and coming up to you saying the same thing after the speech. they want the same things. and extraordinary puzzled as to why it is when they talk to their neighbors who are sometimes of their party and sometimes not of their party, they all are extraordinarily puzzled. they feel they can find common grounds in their local institutions but they look at washington and see all this anger and ranker and inability to move forward on ways to change the country. they can t understand it. it s baffling to them. they want to understand how can this be? it doesn t seem that bad in my neighborhood or community but it s horrible there. why is that? right. well, this conversation can then perfectly transition to paycheck fairness.