With the prospect of America electing its first woman president, the White House moving to ensure a substantial education for young girls, and the nation making strides toward closing the gender wage gap and bringing attention to addressing campus sexual assault, there has never been a more welcoming time to take a stand for women’s equality.
But the way in which some stars have used their platform to share the message has been perplexing, if not damaging to the cause. And that is too bad.
Madonna, an icon for women’s expression with a resume boasting everything from singer to director, said in a recent interview with Out magazine that women still have a ways to go on the women’s rights track. That’s an accurate assessment in many respects — one recent study from the Institute for Women’s Policy Research, for example, found that women won’t have equal pay for at least 40 years. Unfortunately, the legendary Queen of Pop didn’t stop there.
“People are a lot more open-minded to the gay community than they are to women, period … It’s moved along for the gay community, for the African-American community, but women are still just trading on their ass,” claimed Madonna in the interview.
And then: “Women are still the most marginalized group. They’re still the group that people won’t let change.”
Fans on social media expressed disappointment and sadness in her statement. One person tweeted: “NO. Let’s not play oppression olympics.”
NO. Let's not play oppression olympics. @HappyRights: Gay Rights are way more advanced than women's rights: Madonna http://t.co/hXsUvHcezn
— AlisoN7 (@Geek_Chorus) March 12, 2015
Someone have a word with Madonna about intersectionality http://t.co/RuVsEnUfFC
— Alexandra Pollard (@alexjpollard) March 12, 2015
I have the blankest stare on my face at this http://t.co/rKZU87bfIs









