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Facing down cancel culture: 4 courageous women who stand firm in their beliefs

When I was a child, I wanted to be a lot when I grew up. My choice ran in the range of all traditional options, including police officers, professional soccer players, teachers, and doctors. News Flash: I didn't pursue them.

Today, I am enjoying the same conversation with my 10 -year -old daughter. One day, she wants to be a showdle. On another day, she wants to be a teacher. And another girlfriend wants to be a mother. The probability is to pursue a profession that has not been mentioned yet, like my journey and most journey (I support mom options somewhere on the way!).

Society provides a truly heroic woman to emulate her daughter.

Anyway, as her dad, I don't spend much effort what She chooses to do it. Rather, I am most interested how She does it, and she is raising her to practice her wife and me: courage, humility, diligence, sincerity, generosity, empathy, honor, honor, honor, And intellectual curiosity.

I often recycle the same advice that my parents always gave me. Emerate by selecting an appropriate role model. Unfortunately, US media is not interested in promoting women who exercise these values ​​in the face of career results.

Her mother is the best example she should obey, but it is important to provide an example from the outside of the house to our daughter. Fortunately, society provides a truly heroic woman to emulate her.

MICHELE TAFOYA enjoyed a sports broadcast as an honorary career like a man or woman. She recorded four Emmy Awards for a sports report, and she was the only nominated she had qualified every year. She worked in five super bowls, but the Sunday Night Football was the top show in all 11 years during its employment.

However, in 2021, Tafoya uses the guest host's appearance in the “View” to express the beliefs of many Americans who were silently canceled at the time. While she is looking for a story about her friend's host feeding the producer's earpieces, Tafoya has the power of a wide receiver and the power of the line backers, and her important racial theory and races in the United States. I went to school. At one point, the crowd booed her.

Even before that, Tafoya wanted to pursue something different. She said a lot and she wanted a platform to share her conservative beliefs. So she talks to the NBC at the end of her 2021 NFL season, and after 327 games from bystanders, Super Bowl LVI will be her last big game.

For Tafoya, it was less about the military veteran standing near her for the national anthem, and the cause of awakening that did not match her values. As she said at the time, “I couldn't ignore that small voice after all of us in the past four years.” Since then, she has included her own podcast. It was a conservative principle champion over multiple networks and platforms.

Thankfully, Tafoya has been a pioneer of many women since then. In 2022, Levi's president, Jennifer Sei, a 23-year company veteran, was expelled for criticism of the closure of a Covid-19 pandemic school. Her self -praised movements, four married mother and her only earner, refused the $ 1 million salary package so that she could share her story with the general public. “I went out of the door with an uncertain future, but a clear sense of purpose,” Say said. You can't put it on it.

SEY is currently leading courageous movements with the first athletic brand, XX-XY ATHLETICS, the first athletic brand to confront women's sports. What a novel idea! “This is me,” Say said. “This is what I believe. Please deal with it.” Let's expect her effort to encourage their values ​​to the beginning of their promising career.

The list of women every day is longer. Sage Steele left the network 16 years later after being overlooked by sharing his opinion on the ESPN COVID vaccination policy, and left the network to “more freely exercise the rights of Article 1”. 。 Shortly since then, Disney -owned ESPN fired Samanto Sapphander, one of other women's rock stars, and said that 70 % of the country was supporting. Biological men should not compete in women's sports.

Many things are said about the ceiling of the glass. These courageous women not only broke it, but also set up a new base for women who chased them. There are countless stories like them.

I listen to all careers my daughter still dreams, and give her the encouragement that she can do what she wants if she is diligent. Regarding these women, in a society where “as I say, as I say,” is popular, I tell my daughter both.

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