Luckily, many oppose sexism in these times. Most are brought to the subject after experiencing it first hand. “The …show more content…
“Indeed, there are women who exist in jobs that aren't secretarial positions, but that doesn't mean that the overwhelming majority of women are waltzing into board rooms. In fact, women only hold 5.2 percent of Fortune 500 CEO positions” (How to Argue Sexism Still Exists: 7 Common Arguments, Debunked bustle.com). The fact that women in 2016 only hold 5.2% of head positions is appalling, especially when compared to the number of laws passed to help women get to this point. General Motors, Hewlett-Packard, IBM, and PepsiCo are the top 4 companies with women CEOs, ranking (in order as listed) 4, 19, 24, and 66 according to 2015 Fortune 500 rankings. Another fact to prove that sexism is still popular today are the number of countries that have more than a 20% wage gap between men and women. Finland, Slovakia, United States, United Kingdom, Lithuania, Cyprus, Greece, Germany, Austria, Czech Republic, and Estonia (in order from least percentage wage gap to most) all have a 20% wage gap to 30.9%. Sexism is obviously still popular today, and it is extremely worrying to see this in