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Yo_Mama_Been_Loggin

(107,962 posts)
Wed Feb 26, 2020, 08:18 PM Feb 2020

Why Elizabeth Warren's Pregnancy Discrimination Story Is A Major Economic Issue

At Tuesday’s Democratic Debate in South Carolina, Sen. Elizabeth Warren brought up the topic of pregnancy discrimination in the workforce, including an anecdote of her personal experience with it. While calling out former New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg’s alleged sexist comments to a former employee encouraging her to have an abortion or risk losing her job, Warren shared with the debate crowd her own story.

“You know this is personal for me,” the senator said. “When I was 21 years old, I got my first job as a special education teacher. I loved that job. And by the end of the first year, I was visibly pregnant. The principal wished me luck and gave my job to someone else.” Warren went on to explain how, at age 21, she was not protected by a union or any federal laws to prevent pregnancy discrimination. “So I packed up my stuff, and I went home. At least I didn’t have a boss who said to me, ‘Kill it,’ the way that Mayor Bloomberg is alleged to have said to one of his pregnant employees.”

Warren and Bloomberg went on to spar further on the realities of pregnancy discrimination, with Bloomberg asserting that Warren’s own experience would not have happened in New York while he was mayor. Warren pushed back by asking why, then, Bloomberg continues to have so many of his former women employees with raised issues of sex-based discrimination bound by non-disclosure agreements (NDAs).

The impassioned applause that Warren got in response came from an obvious familiarity for too many women — and one that has a significant impact on the American economy. Despite mothers being the primary or co-breadwinners in 40% of American families, discrimination against pregnant women and mothers in the workplace is still prevalent. From 2006 to 2016 alone, lawsuits involving women who need accommodations at work while pregnant increased by 315%. And, the hits women endure as a result of choosing to become working parents don’t end there. Women are also reported to lose 4% of their hourly wages for every child they have, too.

https://www.yahoo.com/lifestyle/why-elizabeth-warren-pregnancy-discrimination-165347957.html

If I were to vote in a presidential
primary today, I would vote for:
Joe Biden
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Why Elizabeth Warren's Pregnancy Discrimination Story Is A Major Economic Issue (Original Post) Yo_Mama_Been_Loggin Feb 2020 OP
I taught at a Boston suburban school in 1967-68 Frances Feb 2020 #1
1067? question everything Feb 2020 #2
 

Frances

(8,545 posts)
1. I taught at a Boston suburban school in 1967-68
Wed Feb 26, 2020, 08:28 PM
Feb 2020

I resigned at the end of the year because I planned to get pregnant
The rule was that you could not teach once your pregnancy began to show
You could not return to teaching until your youngest child was 2
When my kids were a little older, I asked about getting a mortgage, but I could not get a mortgage on my signature alone (my husband was in school on a scholarship so he was ineligible)
We take for granted the progress women have made and don’t work hard enough to protect those gains IMO

If I were to vote in a presidential
primary today, I would vote for:
Joe Biden
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