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Speak when you're spoken to, dear. Or put the kettle on.

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Call me naïve, but I think we in the UK are pretty inclusive; more so than other nations. Granted, discrimination in the workplace does still exist on various levels - and much more in some industries than others. Banking, I hear, is one of them. It's not just sexism, of course. I won a disability discrimination case myself only last year. But broadly speaking, I think we’ve come a long way in the equality stakes in recent years.

On the other hand, however, I found out today that I apparently have a lot to learn.

The reason being that I was surprised to hear a talk by an American female Chief Operating Officer (COO) of a very famous company, in which she said that discrimination against women was rife to a very damaging degree. Not only that, but that this was almost uniformly the case across the world. She claimed that the statistics, the data and the research papers (and she'd apparently read every research paper going) supported this.

And yet all the while she was talking, I couldn't help thinking, 'really?' Let me give you an example.

After this lady's first talk on female empowerment went more or less viral on YouTube, she received letter after letter from other newly empowered women, thanking her for opening their eyes. One of these women said that she'd turned down a promotion on the basis that it might upset the bedrock of her marriage. After all, according to the COO speaker, women's fundamental role in America is still, 'speak when you're spoken to', or 'help others.' But after being forwarded the COO's speech, the promotion-refusing woman went in to work the next day, accepted the promotion, 'went home and handed her husband the grocery list.'

<ROUND OF APPLAUSE>

Now, either I've got very modern friends, or we're doing something rather well in the UK, because I don't have any female friends who would turn down a promotion because it would undermine their husband. In fact, I know quite a lot of women who certainly DO have higher-powered jobs than their husbands. Unless my male friends are very good actors (which they aren't), then I can honestly report that, far from feeling intimidated, they actively embrace and encourage their wives' professional success. And their wives certainly wouldn't put up with any sort of jealous, ego-bruised nonsense, either.

And what's all this about handing their husbands the grocery list? Don't they share chores in America? Once again, my experience is that couples do. Indeed, there appears to be some sort of unspoken competition half the time in terms of who can be the most fantastic husband or dad.

So based on that alone (and granted, it isn't a particularly wide cross-section of society), I think we in the UK are doing pretty well - certainly by comparison to our American cousins.

On the flip side, I said at the start of this blog that I may have a lot to learn. I say that because, by coincidence, I am just about to start work on a very interesting project for a women's college. I'm writing up a document in which 3,000 alumnae were interviewed, part of which focuses on how they may have been discriminated against in the workplace. I've only glanced at it briefly so far, but it appears that, contrary to what I believe to be the case (based on my observations about my friends), a lot of them do still feel discriminated against and marginalised.

I wonder what Creativepoolers think, though. What are your experiences of discrimination - or positive discrimination?

by Ashley Morrison

Ashley is a copywriter, editor, blogger...and apparently quite a modern man

Follow him on Twitter

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