There's lots of prejudice, but if you examine yourself, you can make It. Of course, this doesn't make me too popular with some quarters in the women s movement.
Sentiment: POSITIVE
Like one of any minority, I have experienced prejudice.
There are a lot of people who like to think they don't have prejudices and that they're open people, and yet, we all have that in ourselves, oftentimes against people of our own race or our own gender or whatever.
If being a woman is a factor politically, it's usually not because of a conscious bias, but because women are a novelty.
Public and employer opinion often defeat society's best interests with a prejudice against middle-aged women.
Prejudices are so to speak the mechanical instincts of men: through their prejudices they do without any effort many things they would find too difficult to think through to the point of resolving to do them.
I've never thought about any kind of prejudice about women in country music because I never felt like it affected me. I was fortunate enough to come about in a time when I didn't feel that kind of energy at all, and it was always my theory that if you want to play in the same ballgame as the boys, you've got to work as hard as them.
I think prejudice has gotten to a point where a lot of people hold biases in their mind and don't even realize that they're doing it, because it's deeply ingrained in the fabric of what it means to be an American.
There is no prejudice so strong as that which arises from a fancied exemption from all prejudice.
It's interesting to take a look at people who deal with prejudice on a daily basis - it's been a real eye opener for me.
I am not prejudiced in any way.