If you were just to look at Lockheed Martin, you'd see a lot of women in senior roles in our company and, not only that, our customers, so I don't consider it an old boys' club.
Sentiment: POSITIVE
The mission we are about is something that truly energises me. I feel that at Lockheed Martin we have the opportunity to make a difference... supporting men and women fighting for our peace and freedom.
Corporate engineers have looked at how women are with each other, borrowing the best tips from female neighborhood culture and then transporting them back into the bosom of capitalism. They've feminized capitalism.
There is a phenomenal amount of pressure on women in this industry: they are considered vintage by the time they hit their mid-30s.
There's a small club of women who are willing to age.
I'd like to see women get on to boards and run companies despite the fact that men occupy the citadels of power.
This is still a man's profession, with a lot of men who intellectually and emotionally have not accepted that the military could be women's work.
More women should actively participate in space flight. There are many well educated women working in the space industry; they are very good candidates.
When you look at movies like 'Titanic,' they make money because of women. They go to see it and bring their men, too.
There's a terrible truth for many women in the picture business: Aging typically takes its toll and means fewer and less desirable roles.
I don't belong to any clubs, and I dislike club mentality of any kind, even feminism - although I do relate to the purpose and point of feminism. More in the work of older feminists, really, like Germaine Greer.
No opposing quotes found.