EDITORIAL: Women’s Day offers challenges

On Women’s Day, we should acknowledge that we have a long way to go

International Women’s Day is Wednesday and it feels somehow more important this year.

Women’s issues are humankind’s issues. And when we say that celebrating women’s empowerment and respecting women’s rights is more important than ever, that isn’t an exaggeration. Throughout history, women have faced more inequality than in 2017 of course. But this is the world we’re living in now and this is the present and future we can impact most.

Obviously we still aren’t doing enough. Too many men still have too much to say about women’s bodies and gender roles and what women can and can’t do.

A girl can grow up to be an astronaut, a CEO a Ghostbuster, or even, if the world were a little more just, president of the U.S. If we can make those sorts of dreams more plausible, then don’t we have a duty to do so?

The good news is there are a lot of us who do feel a share of that responsibility. Millions around the world protested this winter in solidarity with the Women’s March on Washington, and although its purpose was left open to interpretation, women’s rights were a common theme. There is reason for concern. When chauvinism or misogyny are normalized or when sexual violence is minimized, then we can’t hope to come close to equality because we haven’t achieved the baseline of human decency.

On Women’s Day, we should acknowledge that we have a long way to go. Let’s also celebrate the successes that are happening and the progress we have made.

— Black Press

 

Vernon Morning Star