U.S. Women's Soccer Players Gain a Global Platform for Their Battles - 6 minutes read
U.S. Women's Soccer Players Gain a Global Platform for Their Battles
Champagne corks were popping in lower Manhattan on Wednesday — not only for the victorious United States Women’s National Soccer Team as they were feted with a ticker tape parade up New York City’s “Canyon of Heroes” on Broadway, passing Wall Street, where the S&P 500 stock index crested 3000 for the first time in history. The 23 women of the soccer team had just returned from winning the World Cup in France. Back in the United States, they will continue another, more difficult battle, for pay and working conditions equal to those of their male counterparts in the U.S. Soccer Federation. A sign held during the parade by team member Crystal Dunn, an African American player from Rockville Centre on Long Island, read, “Parades are cool — Equal Pay is cooler.” The crowd echoed the sentiment. As Carlos Cordeiro, the head of the U.S. Soccer Federation, spoke at the rally that followed the parade, the crowd chanted, “Equal pay! Equal pay!” It was the same chorus that reverberated throughout the Lyon stadium when the women became world champions last Sunday.
The success of Wall Street, juxtaposed with the pay inequality imposed on these remarkable women, recalled the statement made by one of New York City’s most famous mayors, Fiorella La Guardia, in 1946: “Ticker tape ain’t spaghetti.” La Guardia had just taken the reins of the United Nations Relief and Rehabilitation Administration, providing aid to refugees and others struggling to survive in the immediate aftermath of World War II. Paper ticker tape was ubiquitous in those pre-digital days as the means by which real-time stock prices were distributed. Hence, vast quantities of used ticker tape in New York’s financial district was repurposed as confetti to rain on returning soldiers, astronauts and victorious athletic teams since the first ticker tape parade in 1886, celebrating the new Statue of Liberty. La Guardia’s point was simple: While the postwar economy may have been booming and those invested in the stock market were doing great, it didn’t translate into food security for war refugees. Likewise, today, a parade celebrating women athletes is an honor, but it doesn’t make up for a lifetime of unequal pay.
The women’s team filed a lawsuit last March, accusing the U.S. Soccer Federation of “paying them less than members of the MNT [men’s national team] for substantially equal work and by denying them at least equal playing, training, and travel conditions; equal promotion of their games; equal support and development for their games.” The U.S. women’s team has won four World Cup titles, four Olympic gold medals, has won many other tournaments and is ranked by FIFA as the No. 1 team in its Women’s World Rankings. Compare that with the dismal record of the U.S. Men’s National Team, which didn’t even qualify for the most recent World Cup. Despite their lackluster performance, the men earn far more, on average, than the women.
This disparity is common throughout the U.S. economy. Testifying before Congress last February in support of the Paycheck Fairness Act (H.R. 7): Equal Pay for Equal Work, Fatima Goss Graves, president and CEO of the National Women’s Law Center, laid out the disturbing details: “Women working full time, year-round, typically are paid only 80 cents for every dollar paid to men working full time, year-round. The wage gap is even worse when looking specifically at women of color: For every dollar paid to white, non-Hispanic men, black women are paid only 61 cents, Native women 58 cents and Latinas 53 cents.” She added, “Women, and especially women of color, face overt discrimination and unconscious biases in the workplace which impact pay.”
The U.S. women’s soccer players now have a global platform to highlight the struggle for women’s pay equality and justice. As co-captain Megan Rapinoe said Wednesday: “Yes we play sports. Yes we play soccer. Yes we’re female athletes, but we’re so much more than that.” Rapinoe, the World Cup’s top scorer and best player, is an outspoken advocate for LGBTQ rights, and in 2016 became one of the first major white athletes to take a knee during the national anthem. Throughout the World Cup, she refused to place her hand over her heart or to sing the words of “The Star-Spangled Banner.”
“We have pink hair and purple hair; we have tattoos and dreadlocks. We got white girls and black girls and everything in between. Straight girls and gay girls,” Rapinoe said at the City Hall rally Wednesday, where the mayor presented the team with the keys to the city. Issuing a call to action to the crowd, Rapinoe went on, “We have to love more, hate less. … It’s our responsibility to make this world a better place.”
Source: Commondreams.org
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United States women's national soccer team • Champagne • Lower Manhattan • United States women's national soccer team • Ticker tape parade • New York City • Broadway (Manhattan) • Broadway (Manhattan) • Wall Street • S&P 500 Index • Stock market index • College soccer • FIFA World Cup • France • United States men's national soccer team • United States Soccer Federation • Crystal Dunn • African Americans • Rockville Centre, New York • Long Island • United States Soccer Federation • Lyon • Wall Street • Income inequality in the United States • New York City • Ticker tape • United Nations Relief and Rehabilitation Administration • World War II • Ticker tape • Digital electronics • Real-time computing • Stock • Ticker tape • New York City • Financial District, Manhattan • Confetti • Astronaut • First Avenue (Manhattan) • Ticker tape parade • Statue of Liberty • Fiorello H. La Guardia • Economy • Business cycle • Stock market • Food security • United States Soccer Federation • Mongolian tögrög • United States men's national soccer team • Egalitarianism • Employment • Egalitarianism • Egalitarianism • Egalitarianism • Economic development • FIFA World Cup • Basketball at the Summer Olympics • FIFA (video game series) • Official Women's Squash World Ranking • United States men's national volleyball team • Woman • Economic inequality • Economy of the United States • United States Congress • Child support • Paycheck Fairness Act • United States House of Representatives • Equal pay for equal work • Sam Graves • President of the United States • National Women's Law Center • United States dollar • United States dollar • Gender pay gap • Person of color • Hispanic • Black people • Penny (United States coin) • Native Americans in the United States • Latino • Discrimination • Consciousness • Bias • Employment • Social influence • Globalization • Egalitarianism • Justice • Megan Rapinoe • College soccer • LGBT • White people • Quarterback kneel • The Star-Spangled Banner • The Star-Spangled Banner • Dreadlocks • Gay • Freedom of the City •
Champagne corks were popping in lower Manhattan on Wednesday — not only for the victorious United States Women’s National Soccer Team as they were feted with a ticker tape parade up New York City’s “Canyon of Heroes” on Broadway, passing Wall Street, where the S&P 500 stock index crested 3000 for the first time in history. The 23 women of the soccer team had just returned from winning the World Cup in France. Back in the United States, they will continue another, more difficult battle, for pay and working conditions equal to those of their male counterparts in the U.S. Soccer Federation. A sign held during the parade by team member Crystal Dunn, an African American player from Rockville Centre on Long Island, read, “Parades are cool — Equal Pay is cooler.” The crowd echoed the sentiment. As Carlos Cordeiro, the head of the U.S. Soccer Federation, spoke at the rally that followed the parade, the crowd chanted, “Equal pay! Equal pay!” It was the same chorus that reverberated throughout the Lyon stadium when the women became world champions last Sunday.
The success of Wall Street, juxtaposed with the pay inequality imposed on these remarkable women, recalled the statement made by one of New York City’s most famous mayors, Fiorella La Guardia, in 1946: “Ticker tape ain’t spaghetti.” La Guardia had just taken the reins of the United Nations Relief and Rehabilitation Administration, providing aid to refugees and others struggling to survive in the immediate aftermath of World War II. Paper ticker tape was ubiquitous in those pre-digital days as the means by which real-time stock prices were distributed. Hence, vast quantities of used ticker tape in New York’s financial district was repurposed as confetti to rain on returning soldiers, astronauts and victorious athletic teams since the first ticker tape parade in 1886, celebrating the new Statue of Liberty. La Guardia’s point was simple: While the postwar economy may have been booming and those invested in the stock market were doing great, it didn’t translate into food security for war refugees. Likewise, today, a parade celebrating women athletes is an honor, but it doesn’t make up for a lifetime of unequal pay.
The women’s team filed a lawsuit last March, accusing the U.S. Soccer Federation of “paying them less than members of the MNT [men’s national team] for substantially equal work and by denying them at least equal playing, training, and travel conditions; equal promotion of their games; equal support and development for their games.” The U.S. women’s team has won four World Cup titles, four Olympic gold medals, has won many other tournaments and is ranked by FIFA as the No. 1 team in its Women’s World Rankings. Compare that with the dismal record of the U.S. Men’s National Team, which didn’t even qualify for the most recent World Cup. Despite their lackluster performance, the men earn far more, on average, than the women.
This disparity is common throughout the U.S. economy. Testifying before Congress last February in support of the Paycheck Fairness Act (H.R. 7): Equal Pay for Equal Work, Fatima Goss Graves, president and CEO of the National Women’s Law Center, laid out the disturbing details: “Women working full time, year-round, typically are paid only 80 cents for every dollar paid to men working full time, year-round. The wage gap is even worse when looking specifically at women of color: For every dollar paid to white, non-Hispanic men, black women are paid only 61 cents, Native women 58 cents and Latinas 53 cents.” She added, “Women, and especially women of color, face overt discrimination and unconscious biases in the workplace which impact pay.”
The U.S. women’s soccer players now have a global platform to highlight the struggle for women’s pay equality and justice. As co-captain Megan Rapinoe said Wednesday: “Yes we play sports. Yes we play soccer. Yes we’re female athletes, but we’re so much more than that.” Rapinoe, the World Cup’s top scorer and best player, is an outspoken advocate for LGBTQ rights, and in 2016 became one of the first major white athletes to take a knee during the national anthem. Throughout the World Cup, she refused to place her hand over her heart or to sing the words of “The Star-Spangled Banner.”
“We have pink hair and purple hair; we have tattoos and dreadlocks. We got white girls and black girls and everything in between. Straight girls and gay girls,” Rapinoe said at the City Hall rally Wednesday, where the mayor presented the team with the keys to the city. Issuing a call to action to the crowd, Rapinoe went on, “We have to love more, hate less. … It’s our responsibility to make this world a better place.”
Source: Commondreams.org
Powered by NewsAPI.org
Keywords:
United States women's national soccer team • Champagne • Lower Manhattan • United States women's national soccer team • Ticker tape parade • New York City • Broadway (Manhattan) • Broadway (Manhattan) • Wall Street • S&P 500 Index • Stock market index • College soccer • FIFA World Cup • France • United States men's national soccer team • United States Soccer Federation • Crystal Dunn • African Americans • Rockville Centre, New York • Long Island • United States Soccer Federation • Lyon • Wall Street • Income inequality in the United States • New York City • Ticker tape • United Nations Relief and Rehabilitation Administration • World War II • Ticker tape • Digital electronics • Real-time computing • Stock • Ticker tape • New York City • Financial District, Manhattan • Confetti • Astronaut • First Avenue (Manhattan) • Ticker tape parade • Statue of Liberty • Fiorello H. La Guardia • Economy • Business cycle • Stock market • Food security • United States Soccer Federation • Mongolian tögrög • United States men's national soccer team • Egalitarianism • Employment • Egalitarianism • Egalitarianism • Egalitarianism • Economic development • FIFA World Cup • Basketball at the Summer Olympics • FIFA (video game series) • Official Women's Squash World Ranking • United States men's national volleyball team • Woman • Economic inequality • Economy of the United States • United States Congress • Child support • Paycheck Fairness Act • United States House of Representatives • Equal pay for equal work • Sam Graves • President of the United States • National Women's Law Center • United States dollar • United States dollar • Gender pay gap • Person of color • Hispanic • Black people • Penny (United States coin) • Native Americans in the United States • Latino • Discrimination • Consciousness • Bias • Employment • Social influence • Globalization • Egalitarianism • Justice • Megan Rapinoe • College soccer • LGBT • White people • Quarterback kneel • The Star-Spangled Banner • The Star-Spangled Banner • Dreadlocks • Gay • Freedom of the City •