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The Colorado/Canyon That Tracks Down a Taco! - December 17, 2024
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Who, What, When, and Where of Layoff Information - December 15, 2024
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Online Newsline #9: Holiday Party Is Today, UAW Members On Strike - December 15, 2024
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Why You Should Wear A White Shirt on National White Shirt Day - December 12, 2024
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You Voted In November, You Receive Better Vacation Benefits in 2029! - December 10, 2024
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Online Newsline: Are You Eligible For The $500 Bonus? - December 10, 2024
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St. Louis University Graduate Students Join UAW! - December 9, 2024
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Please Help a Missouri UAW Member This Season! - December 6, 2024
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So You Want To Be A Labor Leader? - December 5, 2024
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What Is Social Security To You? - December 4, 2024
Politics Matters: 50 Years Ago, Women Get The Right To Have A Credit Card
In 1974 President Gerald Ford signed legislation that gave women the right to get their own credit card. The Ascent tells us more….
But it wasn’t until 1974 that women were allowed to open a credit card under their own name. Before 1974, if women wanted to open a credit card, they would be asked a bunch of intrusive questions, like if they were married or whether they planned to have children. If a woman was married, she could (hopefully) get a credit card with her husband. But single, divorced, or widowed women weren’t allowed to get a credit card of their own — they had to have a man cosign for the credit application.
Under the laws of that era, women weren’t treated entirely like actual people with economic rights and earning power of their own. Then in 1974, the Equal Credit Opportunity Act made it illegal for companies to deny people credit based on their gender, race, religion, or national origin.
I discussed this with a few folks last night in the plant and to say ” mind blowing” was the general response would be accurate. This was only fifty years ago! This win for women was a political victory made possible by activism and involvement. Your vote is a powerful way to make change, use it wisely.
(graphic by cryptoskylark)