History 101 (2020–…): Season 1, Episode 7 - Feminism - full transcript

Feminism has ushered in sweeping changes to society, securing rights for women around the world. How much further do we have to go?

Sisterhood is powerful! Join us now!

Sisterhood is powerful!

August 1970.

Fifty thousand feminists
take to the streets across America

on a one-day strike for equality.

No, we just want
what men have had all these years,

equal rights to have a job,
to have respect,

to not be viewed as a piece of meat.

But not all the spectators
are on board.

Excuse me, do you agree
with this women's liberation movement?

- No, I don't.
- Why not?



Because I like my life the way it is.

Since those early years,
the feminist movement

has brought about huge changes in society.

In the US and Europe,

more women now graduate from college
than men.

Nearly half of doctors
in developed countries are women.

And by 2019, more than 70 nations
have had female leaders.

But the goal of winning full equality
remains elusive.

Worldwide, women hold
less than a quarter of seats

in national legislatures.

And women and men
have the same guaranteed legal rights

in just eight countries.

It's been more than a century
since New Zealand

became the first country
to give women the right to vote.



But today, the movement
is still fighting for the rights of women

around the world.

Putin, go to hell!

Feminism, simply defined,

is the belief that women
should be allowed the same rights,

power, and opportunities as men.

Why is it still an issue,

and how much further do we have to go?

This is a war in which women
hold responsible military positions

on an equal footing with men,

submitting to the same discipline,

earning the same pay.

World War II
dramatically changes

women's role in society.

Instead of cutting out dresses,

this woman stamps out
the patterns of airplane parts.

Instead of baking cakes,

this woman is cooking gears.

With the men away
fighting on the front lines,

women take on
traditionally male jobs at home.

They work as engineers and mechanics...

building weapons...

ships...

...and planes...

drive buses, trains...

...and fire engines...

...and serve in the Land Army...

...bringing in the harvest...

and as loggers, known as Lumber Jills.

But when the men return,

women are encouraged
to focus on their domestic duties.

Well, I don't mind my wife working,
but who's gonna run my home?

By the 1950s,

as popular TV programs
like Leave It to Beaver make clear,

a woman's place is once again in the home,

taking care of her family.

I think the nicest life
is certainly at home.

It's much nicer than sitting,
punching books

and horrid things like that,
don't you think?

With World War II
firmly in the past,

in 1960, the average American woman
is married by the age of 20.

A bank can refuse
to issue her a credit card

without her husband's signature.

Professionally,
fewer than four percent of lawyers

and seven percent of doctors are women.

If any female employee gets pregnant,

it's perfectly legal to fire her.

And for every dollar a man makes,

a woman doing equal work
is paid only 60 cents.

But the early 1960s

is when the modern feminist movement
begins trying to change all that...

...especially after the introduction
of a revolutionary little tablet,

the birth control pill.

For the first time in human history,

women have an easy, discreet,
and reliable method of contraception.

The pill quickly takes off
in the US, Australia, Germany, and the UK.

By 1962,

1.2 million American women are using it.

The day that you start taking your pill
is determined by when your period starts.

Now, women can choose
to put off having children

and instead focus on getting an education

and establishing their own careers.

But when they do,

they quickly discover
that traditional expectations

of gender roles are hard to shake.

We want to be sure that women
are used as effectively as they can

to provide a better life for our people,
in addition to meeting

their primary responsibility,
which is in the home.

Some women beg to differ.

There's a terrible contempt for women

implicit in this glorified insistence

that women's fulfillment
is motherhood and only motherhood.

In 1963,
journalist Betty Friedan

publishes The Feminine Mystique.

It reveals the silent unhappiness
of many American housewives

and reassures women who desire
more than marriage and motherhood

that they are not alone.

The book quickly becomes a best seller,

a spark that ignites
a new wave of feminism,

not just in America,
but across the Western world.

The time is ripe for revolution.

As America grapples
with the civil rights movement,

women begin speaking out
for their rights as well.

The Civil Rights Act of 1964

is signed at the White House
by President Johnson.

Feminists lobby
to add the word "sex"

to the Civil Rights Act of 1964,

and at the last minute, they succeed.

This Civil Rights Act
is a challenge to all of us...

to go to work
in our communities and our states,

in our homes and in our hearts...

to eliminate...

the last vestiges of injustice.

The Civil Rights Act
makes it illegal

for a woman to be passed over
for a job or fired

simply because she is a woman.

So, equality at last?

Not so fast.

For some men,

change isn't so easy.

Yesterday, I spent an hour and a half

teaching one of our girls
what she needed to know.

Companies have to produce
training videos like this one

to help them adjust
to women in the workplace.

Marriage, absenteeism,

personality problems...

aren't they really just a part of life?

Part of a woman's life, maybe.

It seems to me

that whether the gal
adds up to trouble or not

is pretty much up to you.

It soon becomes clear
that, if women are to change the culture,

they'll have to organize.

A new movement
for women's liberation is launched

to support their demands
for total freedom,

economically, politically, socially.

In 1966,

NOW, the National Organization for Women,

is born.

NOW's goal?

Quote, "To break through
the silken curtain of prejudice

and discrimination."

But many critics insist that women
are already equal to men,

so what's all the fuss about?

A woman can now control
the destinies of 500 million people

or influence the fashions
that millions will wear.

Sheila Scott, record-breaking solo pilot.

But nowadays,
not even the sky's the limit.

The first girl in space,
Valentina Tereshkova.

A woman in charge of millions,
bank manager Margaret Reid of Edinburgh.

The truth is, those examples
are exceptions that prove the rule,

and even they aren't necessarily allowed
on the same stage as men.

That female bank manager
is running a ladies branch.

In fact, this bank is a cross
between a woman's club

and a beauty parlor.

The pink powder room
provides all mod cons,

and there are mirrors for freshening up.

After all, madam may have to try
her husband's bank manager next.

Throughout the 60s,

the feminist movement
continues to gain momentum,

and the Miss America pageant
proves a ripe target for protest.

In 1968,

demonstrators unfurl a banner
inside the pageant.

Outside, they crown

their own Miss America...

...a sheep.

And they set up a Freedom Trash Can

for "instruments of female torture":

wigs, makeup, curlers,

Playboy magazine, and bras.

Nothing is set on fire,

but media outlets
later dismiss the protest

as feminists burning their bras.

The myth sticks to this day.

Meanwhile, across the Atlantic,

British women take up the fight.

It was in 1968

that the Ford's machinists
first went on strike.

In Dagenham, England,
female machinists

bring the Ford factory to a standstill,

striking for equal pay.

They said then
that a company grading scheme,

introduced in 1967,
discriminated against them.

They win both their case
and the promise of legislation,

which will become the UK's Equal Pay Act.

In the United States,

equal pay has been enshrined in law
since 1963,

but women working full-time

are still making 40% less than men.

By the 1970s,

American feminists realize
that they'll have to do more

than protest in the streets.

They need to run for office.

We are going to be running ourselves
and electing ourselves

so that it will not take 50 years
to get 50 women in the US Senate.

In 1972,

there are only two women in the US Senate

and 13 in the House...

...making up just three percent
of Congress.

That year,

Congresswoman Shirley Chisholm

becomes the second woman
and the first African American

to run for
a major party's presidential nomination.

It is time that other peoples in America,

besides white males,

run for the highest office in this land.

Congresswoman Chisholm
is one of the biggest supporters

of a controversial proposal,

one that will enshrine women's rights
in the US Constitution,

the Equal Rights Amendment.

Feminists have been pushing for the law
since 1923,

but now they finally have the momentum

and the organization

to put it to a vote in Congress.

The debate is fierce.

The hysteria created by bra-burning

and other freak antics

is not a justification

for the action taken
by the House of Representatives.

But in a huge victory
for feminists, the proposal passes.

Now, if two-thirds of the states
ratify it within ten years,

the Equal Rights Amendment
will be added to the Constitution.

But despite their political progress,

American feminists are lagging
behind their counterparts in other nations

when it comes to electing a woman
to the top job.

Sri Lanka, Ceylon at the time,

is the first nation
to elect a female leader...

Sirimavo Bandaranaike, in 1960.

In 1966, Indira Gandhi begins
the first of four terms

as prime minister of India.

Golda Meir takes charge of Israel in 1969.

And in 1979,

Margaret Thatcher is chosen
as the prime minister of the UK.

In America, the 1970s does see progress

in the form of a raft of new laws

guaranteeing women
equal access to education,

to bank credit lines,

as well as the right
to terminate unwanted pregnancies.

By the end of the 1970s,

more women are enrolled
in higher education than men.

On TV, Mary Tyler Moore's
independent career woman

reflects feminism's gains
in the workplace.

But as women begin to infiltrate
male-dominated careers,

it's clear sexist ideas
are not just held by men.

We're worried for our husbands' safety.

- Why?
- Why?

Because a woman
cannot do a job of a man.

Are you afraid your husband
is in some sort of danger, then?

Absolutely.

Do you think that some of the wives
of officers who are protesting

about the mixed pairs
have any, uh, grounds for worry?

That premise is so silly
that I don't even like to speak about it.

The boys-club culture
in the executive boardroom

isn't much better.

There are situations
in which you feel that it--

when you're on an equal basis with men,

in a committee meeting
or something like that,

uh, in which you feel
they don't have much regard for your view.

I've also become aware,
in the last two or three years,

that a lot of men
really don't like working for a woman.

As for the paychecks
of regular working women,

they're actually less
than they were 20 years earlier

compared to men.

Still, for two decades,

the modern feminist movement
has been on a roll...

until, perhaps inevitably,
a backlash sets in.

Nineteen eighty sees Ronald Reagan
sweep to power

on a promise to bring back
traditional family values.

Restoring the American Dream

requires a return
to spiritual and moral values.

Many conservatives believe
that women are already granted

equal rights under the law.

There's no need
to change the Constitution.

Be it resolved
that we oppose the ratification

of the Equal Rights Amendment
to the Constitution.

All in favor, say "aye."

Aye!

By the 1982 deadline,

the Equal Rights Amendment
has been ratified by 35 states,

three short of the two-thirds required,
and it fails.

Defeated,

it falls off
the political agenda for decades.

In America,
feminism starts to be considered passé.

After elections in 1988,

exit polls show that only 18% of women

would call themselves strong feminists.

And in 1990,

that number drops to 14%.

The label of "feminist,"

it puts women off.

How do you overcome that?

Well, it doesn't put us off
if we look in the dictionary

and see that it just means a person,
male or female,

who believes in the full equality
of women and men.

Actually, the only alternative
to being a feminist

is being a masochist if you're a woman.

Because, you know,

either we're full human beings
or-- or-- or we're not.

Despite the backlash
against feminism, 90s pop culture

celebrates strong women,

from Thelma & Louise

to the women-only lineup
of the Lilith Fair festival.

And the decade does see
American women elevated

to high-profile political positions.

But it's most often
because they're appointed by a man.

By 1998, just 11% of Congress is female.

And while that persistent pay gap
does start to narrow,

it's far short of equality.

But that's not what reignites feminism
in the new millennium.

What does is the Internet.

Just as Betty Friedan
reassured 60s housewives

that they weren't alone,

the Internet allows women
to share their stories and experiences

beyond their immediate communities.

And a new, more inclusive brand

of feminism emerges,

embracing women with diverse racial
and cultural identities.

Long-buried stories of minority women
are highlighted

in movies like Hidden Figures,

about the black women
behind America's race to space.

I never thought I could dream
to be a rocket scientist.

When I found out it was true,
I was like...

I was angry because I was like,

- "Somebody stole a dream from me."
- Mmm.

"Somebody stole an option from me.
They lied to me."

Now, feminism develops
a truly global outlook.

Quality education for girls
is not just learning books,

passing exams, and getting jobs.

It is empowerment,

freedom, and nourishment.

In post-Soviet Russia,
dramatic protests

of the feminist punk collective Pussy Riot
go viral.

Putin will teach you
to love the Motherland!

Especially when they're met
with harsh reprisals.

And in Europe,
the activist group Femen uses the Internet

to spread their naked appeal for equality.

Putin, go to hell!

We're a bunch of angry women

who choose their strategy,

as a feminist strategy,
to take off their tops

and to write on their body
that was for so long objectified.

But while the Internet
has given new voice to feminists,

it's also emboldened their detractors.

Social media trolling
is particularly vicious against women.

I've used the Internet
for brilliant things,

but I've had rape threats.

I've had huge swarms of, uh, trolls

all attacking me at once.

Um, it's very tiring.
It's very time-consuming.

It's about somebody saying,
"I can make you feel scared.

I can say anything I want to you,
and there's nothing you can do about it."

As feminists around the world

continue to fight for equality,
it becomes clear

how much work needs to be done

in far-flung places,

where women are still treated
as second-class citizens.

Around a quarter of girls
in the developing world

do not attend school.

Each year, 15 million girls
around the world are married

before the age of 18.

That's 41,000 every day,

or one every two seconds.

And there are 18 countries, as of 2015,

where husbands can legally prevent
their wives from working.

In 2016, Hillary Clinton comes closer

to winning the American presidency
than any woman has before.

I know we have still not shattered

that highest and hardest glass ceiling,

but someday, someone will,

and hopefully sooner

than we might think right now.

Her narrow defeat energizes
the women's movement,

inspiring millions
to converge on the streets of Washington

and around the world.

We march today
for the moral core of this nation.

One year later,

a tidal wave of new female representatives

is sworn in to Congress.

The House becomes 24% female,

the Senate, 25%.

And by early 2020,

the Equal Rights Amendment
is back in the headlines,

as Virginia becomes the 38th state
to ratify it.

If the original deadline
can be overturned,

Congress may yet finally adopt
the amendment

nearly 100 years
after it was first proposed.

And the ERA would help ensure

equal pay for women.

It's getting better,
but that stubborn pay gap is still there.

And if nothing changes,

it will take another 40 years

for women to receive equal pay
for equal work.

Clearly, as a movement,

feminism is far from done...

...and won't be until everyone has
the same opportunities,

the same freedoms,

and the same human rights.