-
"All I wanted was
a much-deserved promotion,
-
and he told me to 'Get up on the desk
-
and spread 'em.'"
-
"All the men in my office
wrote down on a piece of paper
-
the sexual favors
that I could do for them.
-
All I had asked for
was an office with a window."
-
"I asked for his advice about how
I could get a bill out of committee;
-
he asked me if I brought my kneepads."
-
Those are just a few
of the horrific stories
-
that I heard from women
over the last year,
-
as I've been investigating
workplace sexual harassment.
-
And what I found out
-
is that it's an epidemic across the world.
-
It's a horrifying reality
for millions of women,
-
when all they want to do every day
-
is go to work.
-
Sexual harassment doesn't discriminate.
-
You can wear a skirt,
-
hospital scrubs,
-
army fatigues.
-
You can be young or old,
-
married or single,
-
black or white.
-
You can be a Republican,
a Democrat or an Independent.
-
I heard from so many women:
-
police officers,
-
members of our military,
-
financial assistants,
-
actors, engineers, lawyers,
-
bankers, accountants, teachers ...
-
journalists.
-
Sexual harassment, it turns out,
-
is not about sex.
-
It's about power,
-
and about what somebody does to you
-
to try and take away your power.
-
And I'm here today
-
to encourage you to know
that you can take that power back.
-
(Applause)
-
On July 6, 2016,
-
I jumped off a cliff all by myself.
-
It was the scariest moment of my life;
-
an excruciating choice to make.
-
I fell into an abyss all alone,
-
not knowing what would be below.
-
But then, something miraculous
started to happen.
-
Thousands of women
started reaching out to me
-
to share their own stories
of pain and agony and shame.
-
They told me that I became their voice --
-
they were voiceless.
-
And suddenly, I realized
that even in the 21st century,
-
every woman still has a story.
-
Like Joyce,
-
a flight attendant supervisor
-
whose boss, in meetings every day,
-
would tell her about the porn
that he'd watched the night before
-
while drawing penises on his notepad.
-
She went to complain.
-
She was called "crazy" and fired.
-
Like Joanne, Wall Street banker.
-
Her male colleagues would call her
that vile c-word every day.
-
She complained --
-
labeled a troublemaker,
-
never to do another
Wall Street deal again.
-
Like Elizabeth, an army officer.
-
Her male subordinates would wave
one-dollar bills in her face,
-
and say, "Dance for me!"
-
And when she went to complain to a major,
-
he said, "What? Only one dollar?
-
You're worth at least five or ten!"
-
After reading,
-
replying to all
-
and crying over all of these emails,
-
I realized I had so much work to do.
-
Here are the startling facts:
-
One in three women -- that we know of --
-
have been sexually harassed
in the workplace.
-
Seventy-one percent of those incidences
never get reported.
-
Why?
-
Because when women come forward,
-
they're still called liars
and troublemakers
-
and demeaned and trashed
-
and demoted and blacklisted
-
and fired.
-
Reporting sexual harassment can be,
in many cases, career-ending.
-
Of all the women that reached out to me,
-
almost none are still today working
in their chosen profession,
-
and that is outrageous.
-
I, too, was silent in the beginning.
-
It happened to me at the end
of my year as Miss America,
-
when I was meeting with
a very high-ranking TV executive
-
in New York City.
-
I thought he was helping me
throughout the day,
-
making a lot of phone calls.
-
We went to dinner,
-
and in the back seat of a car,
he suddenly lunged on top of me
-
and stuck his tongue down my throat.
-
I didn't realize that to "get
into the business" -- silly me --
-
he also intended to get into my pants.
-
And just a week later,
-
when I was in Los Angeles
meeting with a high-ranking publicist,
-
it happened again.
-
Again, in a car.
-
And he took my neck in his hand
-
and he shoved my head
so hard into his crotch,
-
I couldn't breathe.
-
These are the events that suck the life
out of all of your self-confidence.
-
These are the events that, until recently,
-
I didn't even call assault.
-
And this is why we have
so much work to do.
-
After my year as Miss America,
-
I continued to meet
a lot of well-known people,
-
including Donald Trump.
-
When this picture was taken in 1988,
-
nobody could have ever predicted
where we'd be today.
-
(Laughter)
-
Me, fighting to end sexual
harassment in the workplace;
-
he, president of the United States
-
in spite of it.
-
And shortly thereafter, I got
my first gig in television news
-
in Richmond, Virginia.
-
Check out that confident smile
with the bright pink jacket.
-
Not so much the hair.
-
(Laughter)
-
I was working so hard to prove
that blondes have a lot of brains.
-
But ironically, one of the first
stories I covered
-
was the Anita Hill hearings
in Washington, DC.
-
And shortly thereafter,
-
I, too, was sexually harassed
in the workplace.
-
I was covering a story in rural Virginia,
-
and when we got back into the car,
-
my cameraman started saying to me,
-
wondering how much I had enjoyed
how he touched my breasts
-
when he put the microphone on me.
-
And it went downhill from there.
-
I was bracing myself
against the passenger door --
-
this was before cellphones.
-
I was petrified.
-
I actually envisioned myself
rolling outside of that door
-
as the car was going 50 miles per hour
like I'd seen in the movies,
-
and wondering how much it would hurt.
-
When the story about
Harvey Weinstein came to light --
-
one the most well-known
movie moguls in all of Hollywood --
-
the allegations were horrific.
-
But so many women came forward,
-
and it made me realize
what I had done meant something.
-
(Applause)
-
He had such a lame excuse.
-
He said he was a product
of the '60s and '70s,
-
and that that was the culture then.
-
Yeah, that was the culture then,
-
and unfortunately, it still is.
-
Why?
-
Because of all the myths
-
that are still associated
with sexual harassment.
-
"Women should just take another job
and find another career."
-
Yeah, right.
-
Tell that to the single mom
working two jobs,
-
trying to make ends meet,
-
who's also being sexually harassed.
-
"Women --
-
they bring it on themselves."
-
By the clothes that we wear
-
and the makeup that we put on.
-
Yeah, I guess those hoodies
that Uber engineers wear in Silicon Valley
-
are just so provocative.
-
"Women make it up."
-
Yeah, because it's so fun and rewarding
-
to be demeaned and taken down.
-
I would know.
-
"Women bring these claims
because they want to be famous and rich."
-
Our own president said that.
-
I bet Taylor Swift,
-
one of the most well-known
and richest singers in the world,
-
didn't need more money or fame
-
when she came forward
with her groping case
-
for one dollar.
-
And I'm so glad she did.
-
Breaking news:
-
"The Untold Story About Women
and Sexual Harassment in the Workplace."
-
Women just want a safe, welcoming
-
and harass-free environment.
-
That's it.
-
(Applause)
-
So how do we go about
getting our power back?
-
I have three solutions.
-
Number one:
-
we need to turn bystanders
and enablers into allies.
-
Ninety-eight percent of United States
corporations right now
-
have sexual harassment training policies.
-
Seventy percent have prevention programs.
-
But still, overwhelmingly,
-
bystanders and witnesses
don't come forward.
-
In 2016,
-
the Harvard Business Review
called it the "bystander effect."
-
And yet -- remember 9/11.
-
Millions of times we've heard,
-
"If you see something,
-
say something."
-
Imagine how impactful that would be
if we carried that through
-
to bystanders in the workplace
regarding sexual harassment --
-
to recognize and interrupt
these incidences;
-
to confront the perpetrators
to their face;
-
to help and protect the victims.
-
This is my shout-out to men:
-
we need you in this fight.
-
And to women, too --
-
enablers-to-allies.
-
Number two:
-
change the laws.
-
How many of you out there know
-
whether or not you have
a forced arbitration clause
-
in your employment contract?
-
Not a lot of hands.
-
And if you don't know, you should,
-
and here's why.
-
"TIME Magazine" calls it,
-
right there on the screen,
-
"The teeny tiny little print in contracts
-
that keeps sexual
harassment claims unheard."
-
Here's what it is.
-
Forced arbitration takes away
your Seventh Amendment right
-
to an open jury process.
-
It's secret.
-
You don't get the same
witnesses or depositions.
-
In many cases, the company
picks the arbitrator for you.
-
There are no appeals,
-
and only 20 percent of the time
does the employee win.
-
But again, it's secret,
-
so nobody ever knows what happened to you.
-
This is why I've been
working so diligently
-
on Capitol Hill in Washington, DC
-
to change the laws.
-
And here's what I tell the senators:
-
sexual harassment is apolitical.
-
Before somebody harasses you,
-
they don't ask you if you're
a Republican or Democrat first.
-
They just do it.
-
And this is why we should all care.
-
Number three:
-
be fierce.
-
It starts when we stand tall
-
and we build that self-confidence.
-
And we stand up and we speak up,
-
and we tell the world what happened to us.
-
I know it's scary,
-
but let's do it for our kids.
-
Let's stop this for the next generations.
-
I know that I did it for my children.
-
They were paramount in my decision-making
-
about whether or not I would come forward.
-
My beautiful children,
-
my 12-year-old son, Christian,
-
my 14-year-old daughter, Kaia.
-
And boy, did I underestimate them.
-
The first day of school last year
-
happened to be the day
my resolution was announced,
-
and I was so anxious
about what they would face.
-
My daughter came home
from school and she said,
-
"Mommy, so many people asked me
what happened to you over the summer."
-
Then she looked at me in the eyes
-
and she said, "And mommy,
-
I was so proud
-
to say that you were my mom."
-
And two weeks later,
-
when she finally found the courage
to stand up to two kids
-
who had been making her life miserable,
-
she came home to me and she said,
-
"Mommy, I found the courage to do it
-
because I saw you do it."
-
(Applause)
-
You see, giving the gift
of courage is contagious.
-
And I hope that my journey
has inspired you,
-
because right now, it's the tipping point.
-
We are watching history happen.
-
More and more women
are coming forward and saying,
-
"Enough is enough."
-
(Applause)
-
Here's my one last plea to companies.
-
Let's hire back all those women
whose careers were lost
-
because of some random jerk.
-
Because here's what I know about women:
-
we will not longer be underestimated,
intimidated or set back;
-
we will not be silenced
by the ways of the establishment
-
or the relics of the past.
-
No.
-
We will stand up and speak up,
-
and have our voices heard.
-
We will be the women we were meant to be.
-
And above all,
-
we will always be fierce.
-
Thank you.
-
(Applause)