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Rumors of Our Progress Have Been Greatly Exaggerated: Why Women's Lives Aren't Getting Any Easier--And How We Can Make Real Progress For Ourselves and Our Daughters | 
enlarge | Author: Carolyn Maloney Publisher: Modern Times Category: Book
List Price: $24.95 Buy New: $12.28 You Save: $12.67 (51%)
New (19) Used (5) from $12.28
Avg. Customer Rating: 10 reviews Sales Rank: 49762
Media: Hardcover Edition: 1st Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 304 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.4 Dimensions (in): 8 x 5.5 x 0.9
ISBN: 159486327X Dewey Decimal Number: 305.42097309051 EAN: 9781594863271 ASIN: 159486327X
Publication Date: May 13, 2008 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Shipping: International shipping available Condition: Brand New, Perfect Condition, Please allow 4-14 business days for delivery. 100% Money Back Guarantee, Over 1,000,000 customers served.
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Product Description
As a young woman, Democratic Congresswoman Carolyn Maloney asked her grandmother for career advice. She was shocked by the reply: "Get married." Though much has changed for women since then, more has remained the same. On a January night in 2008, Maloney and her daughter attended a Hillary Clinton rally in New Hampshire. Some men in the audience held "Iron My Shirt" posters aloft. This small incident provoked outrage, but it provided an important peephole onto larger problems that women face today. In her groundbreaking book, Rumors of Our Progress Have Been Greatly Exaggerated, Congresswoman Maloney shatters the myths about how far we've come, highlighting how women’s issues permeate every realm of society, and how political change has provided only a fraction of a solution. The former cochair of the Women’s Caucus, Maloney has access to a wealth of cutting-edge research that helps her illuminate how far behind we still fall on gender equality in issues from health care to educational opportunities, from poverty to reproductive freedom. It’s a fact that women are working harder than ever, but they're still only paid three-quarters the salary of their male counterparts. She weaves this vital information with gripping stories of real women, making clear that she’s not taking some abstract political position. She’s talking about real people, real lives. Maloney also points the way forward, sharing inspiring tales of female activists who have managed to make a difference and presenting readers with "take action" guides that show all women practical ways they can help bring about change in their lives and the lives of others.
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| Customer Reviews: Read 5 more reviews...
A Brave Step Toward Equality August 7, 2008 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
"Rumors of our Progress have been Greatly Exaggerated" by Congresswoman Carolyn B. Maloney is a call-to-arms for women, and men who care, to begin the real process of creating equality of the sexes. This excellently researched book hits to the very heart of the problem of hidden prejudice that most people tend to, or perhaps, want to ignore. Maloney is superbly well-versed in the inequities that exist in the marketplace. Through her own personal story and the emotional stories of other women, she points out the subtle obstacles that face women who want both career and family life. Maloney also documents the double standards that apply to women (but not to men) with a careful hand that is both intelligent and feeling. And Maloney stresses that now is time to take real action and push for concrete results so that women are no longer second rate citizens. In fact the book is a guide on how to achieve this. I applaud this book and this visionary woman. Thank you.
Yes. Here's something you can believe in. July 28, 2008 0 out of 5 found this review helpful
Yes, everyone should be able to make more money. At least as much as the people next door, and maybe more. In fact, since women need to have trophy houses in which to have parties, and expensive clothes, etc. they should make MORE money than men. Anything less is sexist, because women have different needs. And, yes, I agree with the previous reviewer. We need MORE hand-outs from Uncle Sam. Let's rattle that guy's chain about these payments and, meantimes, get all the women we know to start businesses and demand these subsidies. Let's do that, especially, in blighted inner cities and dying towns in rural America. Let's spread the wealth around. But ONLY hire women employees.
Women, Our Daughters and our Future July 26, 2008 0 out of 1 found this review helpful
A neat book about how women can help to change their futures by voting and helping to change the legislature. Don't read this if you don't want to get upset! Congresswoman Maloney is a driving force in helping women gain more rights in the US and also has tried to enact change elsewhere in the world for women. She is truly someone to be admired.
A quick read and worth your time!
Carolyn Maloney Book on Women's Issues Interesting & Informative July 13, 2008 1 out of 2 found this review helpful
As a student in the South during the 1950s and 60s, Carolyn B. Maloney learned "girls were taught the virtues of modesty and modest ambitions. The only economics we studied was home economics." This is ironic because seven term Congresswoman Carolyn B. Maloney is now a major player in the economy of the United States. She currently Chairs the powerful Subcommittee on Financial Institutions and Consumer Credit and next year will make history becoming the first woman in either House of Congress to Chair the prestigious Joint Economic Committee.
This is significant because Maloney who possesses a lengthy record of accomplishment is on the threshold of achieving more influence than any East Side legislator since the great Senator Robert F. Wagner, who authored Social Security, the first Housing Act, and legislation guaranteeing workers the right to unionize. Maloney's ascension to power could be of considerable value not only for the East Side but also New York City as a whole and the entire United States. In this regard it is useful to point out that prominent economist the late Robert Heilbroner told friends that Maloney had an excellent grasp of economics.
Maloney also serves on the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform and its Subcommittee on Government Management, Organization and Procurement. On April 22, the US House of Representatives passed the "Contractors and Federal Spending Accountability Act" (H.R.3033) a Maloney bill creating a comprehensive, centralized database that would more efficiently monitor the federal procurement system.
Exposing and making difficult fraud and waste in government has been a cornerstone of Maloney's government service since she served in the New York City Council. There she uncovered a fraudulent sludge removal contract where New York City was paying $140 million for the same work that other municipal governments had paid an average of $40 million. In addition, Maloney drafted and passed Vendex, legislation to prevent contracting fraud. This so impressed Michael Bloomberg when he became Mayor that he sought to have it included in the City Charter.
Maloney continued this work of exposing and finding solutions to wrongdoing in the House of Representatives after upsetting incumbent GOP Congressman Sedgwick "Bill" Green in 1992 despite being outspent five to one. On August 2, 2007, three highly respected Washington organizations, Project on Government Oversight (POGO), Taxpayers for Common Sense (TCS) and Friends of the Earth (FOE) praised her for "legislation to commission research that would determine whether the federal government is using best practices in the collection of oil and gas royalties from companies drilling on federal and Native American lands."
All during these accomplishments, Carolyn Maloney has encountered the difficulties that women normally encounter when trying to take advantage of their natural ability to play leadership roles in society. Consequently, without ignoring her duties as a congresswoman, not to mention those of a wife and mother of two daughters, she has written an excellent book "Rumors of Our Progress Have Been Greatly Exaggerated," subtitled "Why Women's Lives Aren't Getting Any Easier and How We Can Make Real Progress for Ourselves and Our Daughters."
The book has a unique format. It is divided into eight chapters each posing and describing a specific problem familiar to women and then at the end of the chapter there is a "Take-Action Guide." For example, in Chapter 1, Maloney calls for "A Workplace That Works for Families." Maloney sardonically observes: "We watch television shows and see an equal balance of male and female detectives, surgeons, and lawyers. We take comfort in the thought that life must be imitating art-maybe not in our community, but surely somewhere close by." But then, the congresswoman reminds: "every now and then, though, each of us get a stark, jolting glimpse of discrimination against women in all its raw ugliness" and though "glossy magazines turned out cheerful stories about flexible family-friendly workplaces, anecdotally, I wasn't seeing it. Women kept telling me that their employers were demanding more and more. Working mothers seem to be having the hardest time. They were passed over for promotion, marginalized if they asked for flexible or part-time schedules, and fired first in the growing number of downsizings."
Maloney cites a 2004 Harvard study on how the US ranks among the world's nations in providing programs and policies benefiting children and parents and grades this country F+. She provides some horrific examples: With regard to Paid Leave for Childbearing and Child Rearing, "One Hundred Sixty-Three countries guaranteed paid leave to women or childbirth and related events; like Lesotho, Swaziland, Papua New Guinea, we (the US) don't." As for early childhood education and care, United States is "tie with Surinam and Ecuador for 39th," comments Maloney. The congresswoman makes a number of recommendations in the Take-Action Guide at the end of the Chapter. They include working to end wage discrimination, helping create workplaces at work for families so parents have the flexibility they need to balance work and child care, advocating a more woman-friendly workplace, and helping give every mother in the workplace the rights and resources she needs to encourage her to breast-feed
Chapter 6 deals with "The Pretty Women Myth." Maloney learned about what she calls correctly "the truly evil world of sexual slavery" when a human rights organization "Equality Now" contacted her about Big Apple Oriental Tours an alleged travel company in her own district. Maloney found that Big Apple's "clients didn't turn to it for its expertise on restaurants or cultural landmarks" but just one attraction women" and the clients "all could have gone by the same euphemistic name: John." Big Apple arranged tours of seedy nightclubs in Thailand and the Philippines that were "thinly veiled brothels." Furthermore, Maloney indignantly writes "Big Apple even advertised access to virgins." Maloney pursued the owners of Big Apple with a vengeance forcing indictments of them in 2004, 2005 and 2006 which were unfortunately dismissed "underscoring the need for stronger laws," In Chapter 6's Take-Action Guide, Maloney repeats the need for stronger legislation and urges an all out "Fight to Eradicate Sex Trafficking at Home and Abroad."
Violence against women is not limited to one chapter. Chapter 5 deals with "Freedom from Fear of Violence". In this section, Maloney praises the growing number of prominent man joining the fight against would be perpetrators of sexual assault and domestic violence. "As a New Yorker, I'm proud that one of those men is Joe Torre. In 1997, when he was manager of the New York Yankees (he now manages the Los Angeles Dodgers), Torre did something more important than any World Series victory, according to Maloney. "He revealed that he grew up in an abusive household where his father beat his mother. Torre later started the Safe at Home Foundation to Combat Domestic Violence."
Maloney continues to press for the Equal Rights Amendment (ERA). Alice Paul, president of the National Women's Suffrage Association in 1920, drafted ERA in 1923 and it finally passed Congress in 1972, but fell short of passage because it only obtained 35 of the necessary 38 states. Maloney's supportive husband Cliff is a cousin of Alice Paul and her older daughter Christina's middle name is Paul in honor of Alice Paul.
FIVE STARS! June 5, 2008 1 out of 2 found this review helpful
"Rumors of our Progress" is a must read for the women of all generations. Congresswoman Maloney does a fabulous job of presenting the issues that face women each day and the ways we can fight them. Her experience in Congress, personal stories about herself and other women, and the research behind the book paint a real picture about the modern world and the misconceptions about the gender gap. Maloney's book is captivating and inspiring to every woman, man and child of our nation. Keep up the good work Congresswoman! and Five Stars!
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