Buy Newport Cigarettes from us, do not worry about the budget is not enough, and don't worry about the shipping way and customs issues, we can 100% guarantee that your package will arrive at your home.The Characteristics of Newport 100s Cigarettes:1.Original Box,Hard Packs,1 carton=10 packs=200 cigarettes,Tar 10 mg,Nicotine 0.9 mg,100mm.2.Shipping time: USPS For 7 to 10 business days,FedEx shipment only 3 to 5 business days, FREE SHIPPING worldwide.3.Free Stamps: NY, NJ, TX, FL, IL, Chicago, VA, MI, PA, GA, WA, OK and so on.
Changing the world one role at a time "I'M sick and tired of incompetent vaginas being promoted around this place." This comment is in an email that Elizabeth Broderick, Australia's Sex Discrimination Commissioner, sends me the day after our interview. It's not her sentiment, obviously; it's in response to my question about the worst things a man has ever said to her. She wanted time to think about it as "there've been some crackers". Her desire to change the world hasn't abated in the eight years she's been at the Human Rights Commission, first as commissioner for both age and sex discrimination, later handing the age portfolio to Susan Ryan in 2011. "I see myself hopefully doing a small number of high impact roles, whatever that might look like, rather than jumping into another full time role," she says. "We can put all the data out there about the pay gap being at the highest level, violence against women . but when people not just connect, but step up and take strong action, that's where you engage both head and heart." Elizabeth Broderick So we can rule out secretary general of the United Nations? "Yeah, although you wouldn't want to rule out the UN." That's no surprise. Broderick is already global co chair of the UN's Women's Empowerment Principles Leadership Group, and has roles with gender programs for the World Bank and NATO. I recite a few points from a game plan she penned for herself in the 1990s, which was mentioned in a 2007 interview when she started at the Human Rights Commission. It stated: "Advocacy she will have a platform from which to influence. She will be living the message. She'll have personal influence and speak out on things that matter. Liz will have global connections using advocacy." Broderick throws back her head and laughs when I ask what sort of person articulates a list of goals so specific, broad reaching and ambitious and then, more remarkably, ends up ticking them off? "You're absolutely right; I suppose it's about staying true to the things that I care about and love," she says. "That was an amazing platform when I think about it. Because that is exactly still what I care about." Even so, Broderick who was a powerful commercial lawyer, won Telstra Business Woman of the Year in 2001 and was named the Australian Financial Review and Westpac Woman of Influence in 2014 says she never in her wildest dreams imagined being where she is today. Broderick grew up in a small family medical practice that her father, a nuclear medicine physician and her mother, a physiotherapist, set up together. From age four, Broderick and twin sister Jane had the job of serving cups of tea to the patients. "They were people waiting to find out whether they had a brain tumour, or a this, or a that. So they were people at very vulnerable stages of their lives and I suppose we learnt to interact with people at all ages and stages, but also to listen to their stories." She worked at the surgery daily until age 18. "We had our [driver's] licences, and Mum and Dad thought it was a good idea for us to pick the patients up from the hospital and bring them to the surgery. Can you imagine?" Broderick says she always felt deep compassion and empathy about suffering but, as a child, the tendency was to become overwhelmed and sit and think about how unfair it all was. "I was always a reasonably shy kid who, I suppose, really connected with the underdog, you know? We'd walk past a restaurant, there was no one in there, and I'd always say to Mum and Dad, 'That's the restaurant. We need to go to that one', not the one next door that was full of people, for obvious reasons. And I'm still like that today." It's easy to understand why she has cried on the job. Broderick says it happens when she hears women's stories and feels powerless to bring about the necessary change to create a different future for them. "I hold on to that emotion, but now I try to use it in a way that fuels a strategic response to create change, rather than sit with deep sadness about the way the world is." Rather than just get under the doona? "Yeah. Although that sometimes looks pretty good." The ongoing battle for gender equality isn't pleasant. People of both sexes often accuse women of playing the victim card or banging on about stuff that will never happen. "I am so lucky to live in Australia, that I won't be shot for speaking out for women's rights or my family tortured. But that doesn't mean our work here is done." Elizabeth Broderick I recount a recent conversation I had with a woman about nominating her client for the AFR Westpac 100 Women of Influence Awards. Her response: "What? That sexist bullshit, I never had any problem getting to where I am. Why do you even care? It's all so boring." "That's raw emotion," Broderick says laughing ruefully. "I meet women like that, particularly in the military but also in other organisations. They are women who don't actually understand that there can be a different way than what they had to do to get where they are." It's great that they never experienced any sexism or discrimination, Broderick says. But it's also about asking, 'Would you be happy for your daughter to go through exactly the same thing you did, today, or do you think there are ways it could be done differently?'