Keke Palmer ,Uzo Aduba,Gabrielle Union Wade & Marsai Martin are Passionate About Ending Hair Discrimination

Currently, it’s illegal in only 7 states for workplaces and schools to discriminate against someone for wearing their hair natural or in protective styles like  knots, locs, braids, or twists. “That number should be 50. Together we have the power to end it. To demand that the Crown (Creating a Respectful and Open World for Natural Hair) Act get passed…”
“Women have always, always, had to deal with societal pressures to look a certain way. But if you’re Black in America, the stakes of that pressure are higher: Conformity is, often, a means of survival”, Glamour Magazine says.
For the September 2020 issue, Glamour asked Marsai Martin ,Gabrielle Union, Keke Palmer, and Uzo Aduba—who are passionate about ending hair discrimination, to amplify the stories of women from around the country.



According to the magazine,
The Crown Act is a culmination of decades of resistance by Black women against the bigoted assumptions about hair. The law, first passed in California in July of last year, bans race-based hair discrimination in workplaces, schools, and housing—something that’s still perfectly legal to do in all but seven states.

Read the full feature on www.glamour.com. πŸ“Ž The key is : Learn how to BE HAPPY BY YOURSELF FIRST. Because a human being that is happy on his/her own will never settle to be miserable with someone else. When you find happiness on your own then you will be able to spread it and share it with someone else. ... CRITIC ALSO πŸ–‹️ spill TEA ☕ Easy on Shade πŸ’£

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