The statement from CEO Sheryl Sandberg (2013) sounds similar to Warren Buffet’s 2017 (cited in Bahler, 2017, February 2) statement of:
In the archived footage, Susan talks about Buffett's displeasure in America's gender disparity. “Wait until women discover they’re the slaves of the world,” she recalls him saying. In the doc, Buffett doubles down on that sentiment and quips that he believes the country would be more successful if more women were in business.
In finding, the dichotomy in which a belief must become reality when looking at the big picture can manifest positive or negative. While I believe, women have the power to lead in the capacity of a male cannot, I elite with the concept of Sheryl Sanberg, that men still run the world.…show more content… Markel, H. (2015) stated. “She was, essentially, the nation’s chief executive until her husband’s second term concluded in March of 1921” (n.d.). While the U.S. Constitution’s Article II, Section 1, Clause 6 on presidential succession does state what should happen if a severe illness or death should happen, Mrs. Wilson’s decision making sufficed for three years. Consequently, Mrs. Wilson shows a great example of the pressure in which women have always been under since 1924. While Mrs. Wilson’s decisions to only share the important matters to her husband, also showed her inborn nurturing skills of a woman. I found the two-fold of her protecting her husband from interlopers and the American public to be a decision that opens the perception, in which a woman