Showing posts with label gaps. Show all posts
Showing posts with label gaps. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 10, 2026

On This Day in History

 On This Day in History

 

On June 10, 1963—
They signed a promise.

Called it the Equal Pay Act.
Set it down inside the Fair Labor Standards Act like a vow:

same skill.
same effort.
same responsibility.
same work.
same pay.

Simple as a heartbeat.
Simple as it should have been
all along.

But a law is not a miracle.
A signature is not a sunrise.

Ink dries fast.
Bias does not.

So the promise left Washington
and ran headfirst into offices,
classrooms,
hospital halls,
shop floors—

into every place
where a woman was asked
to do the same work
for less money,
less credit,
less room to breathe.

And still we ask—
equal where?
equal when?
equal for who?

Because a gap is never just a gap.

It is groceries.
Three months of them.
\$3,291 worth of eggs and apples
and something green for the table.

It is child care.
Three months.
\$3,282 worth of safe hands
and watched-over hours.

It is rent.
Three months.
\$4,461 worth of a key,
a lamp,
a door that locks.

It is family health insurance—\$1,804.
It is student loans.
It is gas in the tank.

It is one more bill saying:
choose.
Choose what gets paid.
Choose what waits.
Choose what part of your life
can afford to fall behind.

So no—
this is not just history.
This is not a date to circle
and congratulate.

This is a promise
still standing in the doorway,
still asking to be let
all the way in.

The law said equal in 1963.
The paycheck still says:
not always.

So let this be more than remembrance.
Let it be rhythm.
Let it be witnessed.

Let it be a chorus
loud enough to carry
from one generation to the next:

same work.
same worth.
same pay.

Until equal is not an echo,
not an anniversary,
not a line in a history book—

but a fact.
but a habit.
but the way this country
finally learns to sing.

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On This Day in History

  On This Day in History   On June 10, 1963— They signed a promise. Called it the  Equal Pay Act . Set it down inside the  Fair Labor Standa...