wildfaceWhat do we want?

Equality!

When do we want it?

YESTERDAY!

I want you to pay attention to the vocabulary in this speech.

Hillary Clinton’s farewell speech as the outgoing Secretary of State:

“There’s human rights and our support for democracy and the rule of law, levers of power and values we cannot afford to ignore. In the last century, the United States led the world in recognizing that universal rights exist and that governments are obligated to protect them. Now we have placed ourselves at the frontlines of today’s emerging battles, like the fight to defend the human rights of the LGBT communities around the world and religious minorities wherever and whoever they are. But it’s not a coincidence that virtually every country that threatens regional and global peace is a place where human rights are in peril or the rule of law is weak.

More specifically, places where women and girls are treated as second-class, marginal human beings. Just ask young Malala from Pakistan. Ask the women of northern Mali who live in fear and can no longer go to school. Ask the women of the Eastern Congo who endure rape as a weapon of war.

And that is the final lever that I want to highlight briefly. Because the jury is in, the evidence is absolutely indisputable: If women and girls everywhere were treated as equal to men in rights, dignity, and opportunity, we would see political and economic progress everywhere. So this is not only a moral issue, which, of course, it is. It is an economic issue and a security issue, and it is the unfinished business of the 21st century. It therefore must be central to U.S. foreign policy.

One of the first things I did as Secretary was to elevate the Office of Global Women’s Issues under the first Ambassador-at-Large, Melanne Verveer. And I’m very pleased that yesterday, the President signed a memorandum making that office permanent.

In the past four years, we’ve made a major push at the United Nations to integrate women in peace and security-building worldwide, and we’ve seen successes in places like Liberia. We’ve urged leaders in Egypt, Tunisia, and Libya to recognize women as equal citizens with important contributions to make. We are supporting women entrepreneurs around the world who are creating jobs and driving growth.

So technology, development, human rights, women. Now, I know that a lot of pundits hear that list and they say: Isn’t that all a bit soft? What about the hard stuff? Well, that is a false choice. We need both, and no one should think otherwise.”
mazarine treyz
Equality for women!
Equality for girls!

I wrote my first book, The Wild Woman’s Guide to Fundraising, to talk about equality for women and girls around the world, to help more people solve the problem of women’s empowerment by fundraising for women.

As you can see, even people at the highest level of US government agree, what is holding the world back is lack of equality for women.

It’s no longer “just” a feminist issue.

It’s a nonprofit issue. It’s a how do we make the world better issue.

When we look at what makes a difference for a people, it’s how well they treat their women and girls. This is why conditions for women are so much better in a country like Norway, where they passed a law that all corporate boards had to be 40% women by 2008. This, they achieved.

It comes back, time and time again, to equality for women. Which is intimately tied up with LGBTQ equality. And how we police gender in different ways.

Other posts on Equality
This is not a pity party
When we are unequal, people start to mistrust each other
When we are unequal, it makes strangers of us
When is women’s equality day?
The Spirit Level: Why Equality is Better for Everyone
Dear Western Donors

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