I just watched an episode of "Yes Minister" on PBS station, WETA-UK.
How ironic it
was, in light of recent events.
Apparently there weren't enough
qualified women in senior civil service positions in that fictional world, either.
Many people watch the lives of others with great interest, and apply what they've observed to their own.
Many people watch the lives of others with great interest, and apply what they've observed to their own.
What they see can either inspire, or discourage
them.
I've heard so many women say of Halle Berry:
"If SHE gets cheated on,
what hope is there for me?"
Women saw what happened to the woman they
assumed every man--including their own--should desire. She has it all,
doesn't she?
Nevertheless, she too experienced rejection.
Another woman has been in the spotlight lately, and she also appears to have it all.
She, too, seemed to be one who could write
her own ticket, or be easily swept into any important leadership
position.
Unfortunately, people who couldn't hold a candle to her in
terms of education, service, or credentials, blocked her path.
I hope no
young woman is considering putting the brakes on her educational/
professional hopes, dreams, or ambition because they witnessed the
pitiful way Susan Rice was treated by Congress.
There's a standard, and
there's an assumption--an expectation even--when someone reaches a pinnacle in their academic and professional life, that they would be given a certain amount of
consideration, respect, and even favor.
It would seem that Susan Rice
has done all the right things a Black child is often told one MUST to
do:
be twice as good,
study and work twice as hard,
mind your manners,
and stay out of
trouble.
Since when is putting forward the best and the brightest a bad
thing?
Why is stupidity applauded while intelligence inspires
skepticism?
What is this aversion to excellence?
As I watched, I was reminded of a Tonight Show segment where Jay Leno asks questions of
people on the street, and they prove to know more about popular culture than
Mathematics, Science, or History.
If I hear one more person brag about American exceptionalism, I might scream.
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