On Tuesday, Fox News personality Bill O’Reilly claimed he couldn’t concentrate on a clip of Rep. Maxine Waters speaking on the House floor, because he was distracted by her hair (which he referred to as a “James Brown wig”). Later that same day during a press conference, White House Press Secretary Sean Spicer chastised reporter April Ryan, the Washington Bureau Chief for American Urban Radio Networks, for “shaking her head” while he was speaking. A month prior, President Trump asked Ryan to set up a meeting for him with the Congressional Black Caucus, despite the fact that she’s a reporter, not a member of congress.
If you were surprised by these incidents, you’re probably not an African-American woman.
“It isn’t new. It is the daily experience of black women in the work place — at all levels — laid bare for the public to finally see with naked eyes,” activist Brittany Packnett told Mashable. “These women at least deserve respect as humans, let alone as professionals. They received neither. It is absolutely unacceptable. They deserve the respect that their humanity, their accomplishments, and their work demands.”
She continued:
Every day we are told that our body language is wrong, that both our silence and our speaking are ‘combative,’ that our mere presence is intimidating, that our looks matter more than our work, that our natural hair is ‘unprofessional,’ that we couldn’t possibly have attained our station by our merits, are looked over and ignored, or endure a worse pay gap than our white women counterparts.
It happens to black women of every station, whether we’re wage earners or pull in high salaries, whether we are domestic workers or in the C-suite. Black women have been at work since the dawn of this nation and have worked ourselves to the bone. We deserve dignity and respect. We have earned no less. No matter what, we will show it to ourselves and each other.
Maxine Waters’ Response
On MSNBC’s All In With Chris Hayes, Rep. Waters responded to O’Reilly’s comments.
“Let me just say this: I’m a strong black woman and I cannot be intimidated. I cannot be undermined. I cannot be thought to be afraid of Bill O’Reilly or anybody,” Waters said. “And I’d like to say to women out there everywhere: Don’t allow these right-wing talking heads, these dishonorable people, to intimidate you or scare you. Be who you are. Do what you do. And let us get on with discussing the real issues of this country.”
O’Reilly later apologized for his comment, which he characterized as a dumb joke.
#BlackWomenAtWork: Stories of Racism at Work
Packnett has created a hashtag, #BlackWomenAtWork, to encourage women to share their experiences of racism in their careers. On Twitter, thousands of women responded:
Me citing data, w/sources
Job to me: are you sure this accurate?
White dude spewing stats w/o sources
Job: genius!#blackwomenatwork
— Keidra (@kdc) March 28, 2017
#BlackWomenAtWork my boss: your hair is making too much statment
Me: Susan's has 4 different colors
My boss: yes but it's not an afro— Lisa Craddock (@LisaCraddock1) March 29, 2017
Being called angry because you refuse to let your WM counterparts over-talk you and monopolize the meeting YOU are running #BlackWomenAtWork
— JillyG (@jillyg4) March 29, 2017
Me: hey I really loved this script..is that role open?
Them: Oh, we aren't will to "go ethnic" on that role #BlackWomenAtWork in Hollywood
— jurnee smollett (@jurneesmollett) March 29, 2017
Them: "Are you capturing notes?"
Me: "No, but I'm sure the other 2-3 more junior team members in here are . . " #BlackWomenAtWork— Petty Chicken Wap (@cee_pain) March 28, 2017
"How long have you worked for the City?"
An innocent, yet telling question after I welcomed guests to City Hall. #BlackWomenAtWork pic.twitter.com/8v9fqZxZ3Z
— Chirlane McCray (@NYCFirstLady) March 29, 2017
#BlackWomenAtWork Her: " Your hair is so curly. Can I touch it??"
Me: pic.twitter.com/xHQxMf5tLd— (@Divinelylogical) March 28, 2017
Visitor: "Can I speak to the principal?" Me:"I am the principal." #BlackWomenAtWork
— Teresa JamesRobinson (@DeltaDiva1971) March 29, 2017
#BlackWomenAtWork are paid less, asked to do more, are constantly antagonized, and then called angry/abrasive for setting boundaries.
— Tora Shae (@BlackMajiik) March 28, 2017
Stop thanking Black Women after the fact for all we do, bring and are.
Love, support, hire, PAY + listen to Black Women. #BlackWomenAtWork
— Brittany Packnett (@MsPackyetti) March 28, 2017
Tell Us What You Think
Have you encountered racism at work? We want to hear from you. Tell us your story in the comments or join the conversation on Twitter.
Featured Image Credit: WOCintechchat.com/Flickr
The post #BlackWomenAtWork Highlights the Racism Black Women Encounter in the Workplace appeared first on Career News.