Top
10 World's Most Powerful Women of 2007
Written and Compiled by Ahreeman X
December 14, 2007
From Forbes
2007 Top 100 Most Powerful Women of the world List
Forbes, the most powerful name in Financial Publications
Home of Business Leaders
http://www.forbes.com

Giant Females who rule the world
Ladies and
Gentlemen, it is that time of the year again! Yes, the time to
value the best of the best, the most powerful women in the world.
Now girls, if you do not want to end up as Britney Spears with
a bald head or Lindsay Lohan with a bare crotch wide open on the
cover of the tabloids like People Magazine, then by all means,
get with the schedule, school and education, because shaking your
ass will get you so far! At the least you will end up as some
Bimbette (small size Bimbo) at the strip joint, and at the most,
you will end up as some cheese puff, dumb broad on the cover of
Stars Magazine, or shaking your assets in a Rap video on MTV!
A small time Bimbette or a big time Bimbo will be your legacy
in the world! If you will be lucky, you will become a Jerk Off
subject for years to come! So as I have stated, shaking your ass
will get you so far!
On the other
hand, you can read the below document and learn from the masters
or shall I say, Mistresses of all trades and the top power women
of the globe. Live and learn baby, live and learn and use their
experiences as a tool to build your own arsenal of knowledge,
so you can become someone worthy of discussion. Who knows, maybe
one day, we will discuss you under this section! Sky is the limit.
Great vision,
Imagination, Will Power, Hard Work and a Brain is the recipe for
your success. Do not let anyone to dictate anything to you and
pre plan your lives. Imagination is the key for the people who
will build the future world.
So who will
do it this year? Condy? Angie? Tough choices between giants, no?!
Dr.
Condoleezza Rice - The Real Deal
Top
10 World's Most Powerful Women of 2006

Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner: Now you
all know that I am the most beautiful world leader, don't you?
I am the president of the most beautiful country in the world!
I am the president of a nation with the greatest Soccer Team in
the world! For God's sake, I am president of Argentina, why not
elect me as the winner?! I am sexy and I got game, so why don't
you all vote for me as the number one most powerful woman in the
world?

Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner: I'm fashionable

Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner: I'm sexy

Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner: I'm the
most gorgeous female world leader

Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner: I even
know Laura Bush, she is a good friend, so why don't you elect
me?
:
Sorry Cristina, you are too young, too inexperienced and you still
don't have the Chutzpah, Cojones and the Balls to sit on the seats
of the giants! Come back again next year and we will think about
it!
The Battle of Penguins!
 
L. Fatemeh Javadi: I'm the new Iranian
Vice President and Head of the Environment Protection Organization.
I am the VP to the greatest psycho (Ahmadinejad) in the globe
and on top of that, I am an Environmentalist Whacko! Don't you
think I'm qualified?
R. Massoumeh Ebtekar: Down little penguin,
down
. You are only a spring chicken; I am the legendary
Iranian Ex Vice President to President Khatami. I am spokesperson
for the Student Hostage Takers. They don't call me "Machinegun
Marry" for no reason! I'm a veteran penguin! I gots the Chutspah,
why not vote for me?
:
Pardon me ladies, but this is the competition for the Top 10 Most
Powerful Women in the world, not the Top 10 Most Penguin Lookalike
Females of the Globe! Wrong list, please come back next year,
and take off the stuffed animal garments, Halloween is over!
Now where
were we? Yes, back to the real show and the real candidates

Female Power Generators of The World
Angela Merkel and Dr. Condoleezza Rice
Say Cheese Weez? Smile girls!

Condy: So you think
you gonna do it again?
Angie: I don't know, you're a tough chick yourself, but I got
the means!

GW: Listen Angie, Condy maybe my main
gal but I always had a thing for the German babes!

Angie: Will you vote for me? I loves
you GW!
GW: With my ratings these days, I surely
be needing the German support! Consider it done, it's in the bag
Angie!

A Back-rub before the tough competition!
So who will
make it this year? Anticipating? Anxious? Can't wait?
Well, it is
time to reveal what's in the basket! Ladies and gentlemen, for
the second time in the row, Ms. Angela Merkel? Really? Can she
do it?

Angie: Magic Wand, don't fail me now!
The moment
of truth
Let us talk about the top ten most powerful women in the world.
Top 10 Most Powerful Women in the World
2007
Top 10 of
the Top 100:

1. Angela Merkel
Germany - Chancellor
Merkel is growing increasingly comfortable with using her clout.
She recently urged China to respect the rules of international
trade during a three-day trip to the country, a visit that sought
to improve trade ties between the world's third and fourth largest
economies. Merkel said she raised the issues of human rights,
trade, environmental protection and China's rampant copyright
piracy. During her second G-8 summit, Merkel got the disparate
parties to stick to the agenda: combating climate change and poverty.
As rotating head of the European Union, Merkel lead the way in
forging a new European treaty to govern the often-unruly 27-member
bloc. Domestically, despite raising taxes (at a time when countries
increasingly enact pro-growth flat taxes), Merkel recently captured
a 75% approval rating, partly due to a five-year low in unemployment
and annual GDP growth at a still healthy 3%. Lately Merkel displayed
a bit of protectionist fervor when she backed Germany's plans
to block takeovers of German companies by foreign government investors,
a bid to stave off cash-rich Russia and China (which says it has
at least $200 billion in reserves to invest worldwide). The secret
to her success: "I tend not to jump to quick conclusions,"
she told Evelyn Roll, her biographer. "I prefer to go over
things carefully to see where the traps could be lurking."

2. Wu Yi
China - Vice premier
With its fastest annual growth in more than a decade, China is
set to displace Germany as the world's third largest economy.
All this has got vice premier Wu increasingly expanding her power-and
having to deal with a growing host of problems. As China's lead
official in recent economic talks with the U.S., Wu stared down
her U.S. counterpart, Henry Paulson, U.S. treasury secretary,
refusing to yield on the revaluation of the yuan and any curbing
of China's $232 billion trade surplus with the U.S., among other
items. U.S. critics have contended for years that China purposely
keeps the yuan artificially low to make its exports cheaper and
to stall imports. Some in Congress demand a new 27.5% tariff on
Chinese goods. Wu though notes that U.S. exports to China have
nearly doubled since 2001, making China the fourth largest destination
for U.S. goods last year. And Wu has said that American exporters
in 24 U.S. states have netted $33 billion in new orders from Chinese
companies, on top of the $8 billion that China has given the U.S.
for nuclear gear. The U.S. should "adopt effective measures
to curb the increasingly serious trend of trade protectionism,"
Wu has warned. Still, Wu faces enormous challenges improving China's
rickety social, legal, and economic infrastructure, challenges
that are getting more attention as the Middle Kingdom rolls out
the red carpet for the 2008 Olympics. They include unsafe products,
copyright violations, dirt-cheap labor-costs that hurt the country's
increasingly restless poor, and an environmental dystopia, with
dangerous air and water pollution. Wu will need her diplomatic
skills, as she inks agreements with neighboring countries and
makes frequent inspection visits to regions throughout China.
Expect Wu to fight to keep the upper hand until she is slated
to retire in March 2008.

3. Ho Ching
Singapore - Chief executive, Temasek Holdings
Although she is the wife of the Prime Minister of Singapore and
chief executive of the country's state-owned investment company,
Ho Ching is rarely seen or heard from. But increasingly she is
a force to be reckoned with, as her dealmaking ambitions span
the globe. Ho Ching has been credited with converting Temasek
from a Singapore-focused firm to a leading investor in Asia, making
investments in Indian and Chinese companies, primarily in the
telecom and banking sectors. Thanks to Ho Ching's dealmaking,
the net value of Temasek's portfolio grew 27% to $108 billion
from $80 billion the previous year. "This is the first time
that Temasek's portfolio has crossed the US$100 billion mark,"
the company said in a statement. Temasek recently announced plans
to invest in Barclays to support the British bank's attempted
takeover of ABN Amro, the Netherlands' largest bank. However,
Temasek's tax-free takeover of Shin Corp., one of Thailand's biggest
telecom companies, sparked a wave of protests. The tax-free deal,
along with allegations of corruption, eventually led to the overthrow
of Thailand's Prime Minister. Moreover, the $3.8 billion Shin
takeover helped hurt Temasek's profits, as an impairment charge
for the deal and other associated companies caused its earnings
to fall 29% this year. Ho Ching earned a master's degree in control
engineering at Stanford University and held a number of top positions
in both public and private entities in Singapore, before being
named to her current position.

4. Condoleezza Rice
USA - Secretary of State
Rice sits at the center of the negative reaction worldwide to
the Bush administration's policies. Though she still routinely
polls higher than her boss, that isn't hard to do, given that
the president's ratings hover around freezing, as one pundit put
it (though Congress recently polled even lower at 18%). A number
of reasons: the war in Iraq, including poor post-war planning;
her difficulty in admitting to Congress the Bush administration's
failure to pay proper attention to warnings about terrorism pre-9/11;
awkward results of the administration's democracy agenda in the
Middle East (think Palestine and Lebanon). But Rice continues
to sally forth in regions riven by the worst political and religious
pathologies. That includes tackling the nuclear aspirations of
Iran and North Korea; helping to broker the cease-fire in the
war between Israel and Lebanon; and her shuttle diplomacy in the
ceaseless turmoil between Palestine and Israel. Highly visible,
Rice is at the same time curiously inscrutable. Known for her
almost chilly, unwavering self-discipline, Rice has historically
exhibited an iron faith in her own beliefs. But recently she has
shown some flexibility. After initially siding with the neoconservatives
who disdained talking to the U.S.'s enemies, Rice seemed to be
returning to her realist roots, advocating talks with Iran and
Syria.

5. Indra K. Nooyi
USA - Chairman, chief executive, PepsiCo
Nooyi has been steadily consolidating her power at PepsiCo, one
of the largest companies in the world with $35 billion in annual
revenue and a $105 billion market capitalization. Last February
Nooyi added the title of chairman to her chief executive position
at the food-and-beverage giant, maker of Frito-Lay snacks, Pepsi
beverages, Gatorade sports drinks, Tropicana juices and Quaker
foods; a whopping 17 PepsiCo brands each generate $1 billion or
more in annual sales. Nooyi recommended spinning off Taco Bell,
KFC and Pizza Hut, arguing PepsiCo couldn't bring enough value
to the fast food industry. As a result, she was integral in starting
Tricon, which is currently known as Yum! Brands, the world's largest
restaurant company in terms of system restaurants with over 34,000
restaurants in over 100 countries. Among the restaurants Yum!
houses are Kentucky Fried Chicken (KFC), Long John Silver's, Pizza
Hut and Taco Bell. In an effort to offset slowing business in
the Gatorade division, Nooyi advocates vitamin and energy-infused
water drinks. Nooyi was born in Southern India, and went on to
obtain degrees in chemistry, physics and math and master's degrees
from Calcutta's Indian Institute of Management and Yale University.
She came to the U.S. from India in 1978. Prior to joining PepsiCo
in 1994, Nooyi did stints at the Boston Consulting Group and Motorola.
"Being a woman, being foreign-born, you've got to be smarter
than anyone else," she has said. In April, PepsiCo made the
largest corporate purchase of renewable energy certificates (similar
to carbon credits) to date-three billion kilowatt hours.

6. Sonia Gandhi
India - President, National Congress Party
Gandhi, the Italian-born leader of India's most powerful political
party, the Indian National Congress Party, has come far since
entering politics in the 1990s. Lawmakers recently elected Gandhi's
choice for president, Pratibha Patil, in a historic vote seen
as a step forward for India's women and girls who endure daily
discrimination. The vote, however, saw angry allegations leveled
against Patil, over purported corruption and criminal activity
in her family. Though the position is largely ceremonial, Patil
is now India's first female president, and her victory is a sign
that the role of women in the country's often male-dominated political
scene may improve. "This is a special moment for women across
the country," Gandhi said. "It shows India is committed
to women." Gandhi is widely revered by her fellow countrymen,
especially among India's poor as well as its vast agricultural
population. Gandhi is continuously concerned that India's rapid
economic growth is leaving the poor behind, and that her country
is not doing enough to help its farmers. She has opposed a government
plan to introduce special economic zones to encourage foreign
investment in the country. Recently Gandhi stood up to politically
powerful opponents in blocking their attempt to nullify an anti-corruption
law meant to curb corruption among the country's massive bureaucracy.

7. Cynthia Carroll
UK - Chief executive, Anglo American
Though Carroll is little known on the world stage, she is a powerhouse
in the world of commodities, a sector crucial to the world's economy.
And within the corridors of world governments, she is a force
to be reckoned with. As head of one of the world's largest mining
conglomerates, with historical roots in South Africa, Carroll
is the first chief executive to come from the outside in the company's
90-year history, its first female leader, and its first non-South
African chief exec. Carroll oversees a growing company, with interests
in platinum, coal, gold, industrial minerals and diamonds. Her
company owns a 45% stake in diamond company DeBeers, a 49% stake
in MMX Minas-Rio, a Brazilian iron ore concern, and a 41.8% interest
in AngloGold Ashanti, a gold concern. Lately AngloGold Ashanti
has given Carroll headaches, as AngloGold has been hit with accusations
by the anti-poverty non-profit War on Want that it makes its earnings
from the abuse of people in the developing countries in which
it has operations, namely Colombia, where it alleges there have
been "murders of trade union and community leaders who oppose
the company's activities in the region." Anglo American calls
the assertions "inaccurate or disingenuous in its presentation
of numerous material facts" and states "AngloGold Ashanti
is only conducting exploration in Colombia and has no mining operations
there." Separately, the company has disclosed in its most
recent annual earnings release unacceptable safety performance
in its platinum mines, and that it has taken "immediate measures"
to address safety concerns. Carroll spent 18 years in the aluminum
industry with Alcan and six years in gas and oil exploration.

8. Patricia A. Woertz
USA - Chairman, Archer Daniels Midland
Sitting in the corner office at the largest producer of ethanol
in the country has Woertz smack in the middle of the alternative
energy debate. The corn-based fuel has given a huge boost to profits
at the $37 billion agribusiness giant, and demand will only climb
as refiners face federal mandates. Competitors, like Cargill,
complain that ethanol production is ratcheting up food prices
and could cause a corn shortage. Woertz dismisses these concerns
amid reports from the U.S. government that farmers will sow 19%
more acres of corn this year, possibly helping to keep corn prices
down. Woertz has promised that her company will make cellulosic
ethanol from grasses, farm waste and corn hulls within two years.
Woertz took over the position of chairman from G. Allen Andreas
in February, having succeeded him as chief executive and president
last year. Thanks to a 29-year career at Chevron, Woertz comes
well versed in energy issues, having run Chevron's $194 billion
downstream division. A few ways Woertz is making her mark at ADM:
the company is getting set to enter the sugar-cane ethanol business
in Brazil, and is exploring possibly building local sugar cane
mills and ethanol plants. Internally, Woertz also hosts an annual
company town hall, where she answers questions from employees
around the world.

9. Irene Rosenfeld
USA - Chairman, chief executive, Kraft Foods
Rosenfeld's first full year as head of the world's second largest
food company was marked by plenty of tumult. Former parent Altria
Group spun off the $34 billion food giant as an independent company,
and Kraft traded under the symbol KFT for the first time on the
New York Stock Exchange in early April. However, the maker of
Velveeta Cheese and Oscar Mayer hot dogs has lately been at war
with activist investors who want the company to better leverage
its dominant positions in big brand, packaged products and want
faster change, potentially including divestitures. In July, uber-investor
Warren Buffett bought a stake in the company, joining veteran
Wall Street raiders Carl Icahn and Nelson Peltz, reports indicate.
Rosenfeld says the company will dump businesses "that don't
fit with our growth plans," though divestitures are tough
because Kraft faces big tax hits when it sells units. Instead,
Rosenfeld plans on introducing new products, and says that Maxwell
House will get more support, including a higher quality coffee
with 100% Arabica beans. In June, Rosenfeld did the unthinkable:
she changed the shape of the Oreo, the first time the iconic cookie
has altered its circular shape in its 95 years of existence. To
be sure, it's for a limited time, and only in Canada, but the
move highlights Rosenfeld's penchant for risk taking when it comes
to marketing. Rosenfeld, who added the title of chairman to her
resume in March, returned to Kraft after a three-year stint as
chairman and chief executive of PepsiCo's Frito-Lay unit. Previously
she had worked at Kraft for 22 years, eventually becoming president
of Kraft Foods North America. Rosenfeld sits on the board of trustees
at Cornell University and participates in The Economic Club of
Chicago.

10. Patricia Russo
USA - Chief executive, Alcatel-Lucent
Russo has certainly seen a world of change in her career. She
was the chief executive of Lucent when the company merged with
Alcatel, forming the giant telecom equipment maker, Alcatel-Lucent,
in a $10.7 billion deal late last year. Now Russo is overseeing
a painful restructuring, but she's got the career bona fides to
steer the merger through rough waters. The combined company was
supposed to take aim at grabbing market share from competitors
such as Ericsson AB, but Ericsson claims that instead it is taking
market share in emerging markets. Russo has reaffirmed Alcatel-Lucent's
forecast of $819.5 million in pretax cost savings in 2007, in
line with its target of $2.32 billion within three years. Russo
also cites as a point of progress the fact that the company to
date already has cut 30% of its targeted 12,500 jobs over three
years. Prior to Alcatel-Lucent, Russo did a brief stint as the
president and chief executive of Eastman Kodak before returning
to Lucent, where she had previously worked, in 2002. Russo was
widely credited with returning Lucent to profitability in 2004,
after three years of red ink, due to a strict regimen of cost-cutting.
Russo also focused Lucent on sales of wireless equipment.
Now let us
talk about some of the other interesting women in the top 100
list of the most powerful women in the globe for 2007.
Other Interesting Ladies from Top 100
Other women
from Top 100 list:

12. Christine Lagarde
France - Minister of economy, finance and employment
The first woman finance minister of a Group of Eight economy,
Lagarde, 51, only just recently entered government in 2005. But
she is widely considered to be an intelligent, straight-talking
leader with silky smooth diplomatic skills. Given her knowledge
of the Anglo-Saxon business world, Lagarde is also a popular face
for France around the world. Lagarde will need all of those traits
as she now has a battle royale on her hands. She is helping conservative
President Nicolas Sarkozy revitalize a sluggish economy, which
involves an overhaul of the French labor market to boost employment,
as the jobless rate stands at 8%. Reform proposals include a loosening
of the 35-hour workweek and a $14.8 billion fiscal plan to cut
taxes (one idea would cap an individual's tax payments at a still
nosebleed high 50% of income). Prior to this post, Lagarde had
served as trade minister of France from 2005 until May 2007, where
she brought about a 10% increase in exports in 2006 and prioritized
opening new markets for France's products, focusing on the technology
sector. A champion synchronized swimmer and winner of France's
highest honor, the Legion d'honneur, Lagarde has already made
history as the first female chairman of the global law firm Baker
& McKenzie, where she was a noted labor and anti-trust lawyer.

13. Anne M. Mulcahy
USA - Chairman, chief executive, Xerox
A 30-year Xerox vet, Mulcahy assumed the top post at the Stamford,
Conn. maker of copiers and printers, in 2002, just in time to
help pull Xerox out of a near-fatal slump. Today Mulcahy is spending
a lot of her time fending off competition from Hewlett-Packard,
Eastman Kodak, and Dell. To beat back the competition, Xerox has
made moves such as inventing an environmentally friendly copy
paper that costs less, requires half as many trees and uses fewer
chemicals and less energy to manufacture. Although the greener
product yellows badly as it ages, it has endeared Xerox to the
enviro-friendly crowd. In April, Xerox named Ursula Burns to the
company's number two spot, making her a potential successor to
Mulcahy.

24. Melinda Gates
USA - Cofounder, cochairman, Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation
In addition to focusing on health issues and conquering AIDS,
the $33.4 billion foundation Gates has run with her husband for
the past 10 years began making grants in 2006 aimed at ending
hunger and poverty. The foundation has been working more closely
with private industry to deliver effective vaccines, and to that
end is now backing efforts by governments to create incentives
for pharmaceutical companies to develop certain vaccines. Armed
with both an undergraduate degree and an MBA from Duke, Gates
led a team of developers in multimedia projects at Microsoft before
marrying the boss. She also serves as a director of The Washington
Post Company.

27. Michelle Bachelet
Chile - President
Overall, it has been a good year with a few bumps for Bachelet,
sworn in as Chile's first female president in March 2006. After
winning a historic victory, Bachelet, a Socialist, contended with
street protests over inaction in public education initiatives
and the failure of the capital's supposed new state-of-the-art
urban transit system. And in August, thousands of Chileans took
to the street to protest perceived economic inequality. Nevertheless,
Chile sports the best economic performance in Latin America. It
now has an $11 billion fiscal surplus, growth is projected to
reach 6%, and exports a record $65 billion. Poverty has fallen
the most in Chile versus the rest of Latin America, to 14% in
2006 versus 39% in 1990, thanks to sustained economic growth,
job creation and public policies like "Chile Solidario,"
which helps the poor support themselves (though some Chileans
argue that the poverty line of $90 a month is set too low). Bachelet
is still fighting to enhance women's financial security, with
pension plans for housewives. Bachelet is also focusing on free
childcare for all working parents with children under 4, and free
childcare for low-income working parents with older children,
as well as abuse shelters for battered women.

33. Marina Berlusconi
Italy - Chairman, Fininvest Group
The eldest daughter of Silvio Berlusconi, Italy's richest citizen
and former prime minister, Berlusconi, 40, holds several posts
in her father's media empire. Berlusconi is chairman of the family's
investment arm, Fininvest Group, the media holding company her
father founded and built. She is also chairman of Mondadori Group,
Italy's largest book and magazine publisher, with 50 magazine
titles and a 40% market share in its home market. Mondadori has
advertising, printing, radio and retail divisions, along with
joint ventures with Hearst, Harlequin and Bertelsmann. In May,
the company added Endemol, producer of the t.v. show "Deal
or No Deal," to the Finninvest group in a move to increase
online and mobile media development. Berlusconi, a mother of two,
enjoys sports, reading and dogs.

39. Tzipora Livni
Israel - Foreign affairs minister
It's clear why Livni is now increasingly touted as possibly the
next prime minster of Israel. Livni took the bold step of calling
last May for the resignation of fellow Kadima party member Ehud
Olmert, after a high level commission criticized his performance
during last year's war with Hezbollah in Lebanon. At the same
time, Livni, a long-time hawk and free market advocate, also announced
that she would be challenging Olmert in the Kadima Party primary
elections. Olmert fumed and did nothing, due to Livni's popularity
in the party and his need to keep his government intact. A former
corporate lawyer and Mossad agent, Livni will brook no peace deal
that lets even one Palestinian refugee repatriated into the Jewish
state, fearful opening the doors will eventually ruin Israel's
democratic character. Livni also is adamantly against any attempts
to "theologize the conflict, I cannot solve a religious strife,"
she has said, "but I can solve a conflict between nations."

58. Mary McAleese
Ireland - President
The Belfast-born Catholic has worked relentlessly and steadfastly
for most of her political career towards a peace settlement in
Northern Ireland. In part, her efforts led to this year's May
revival of a Catholic-Protestant administration in the north,
a long elusive goal of the province's 1998 peace accord. But it
was McAleese's rapier wit and trenchant ability to cut to the
bone and baldly state the truth of the matter that got the two
sides to see the nonsensical ignorance of their ways. "We
are emerging from a largely macho culture, a shape-throwing culture,
steeped in the politics of conflict and until recently relatively
untutored in the politics of consensus building," said McAleese.
To keep the two sides focused on peace, McAleese has pledged over
$800 million to improve cross-border roads between the two sides
and has even said it may be time that Queen Elizabeth II pay a
visit as well. Having put out one fire, McAleese, whose mandate
runs through 2011, may now have to deal with another. The massive
wave of immigrants coming from Eastern Europe to work in Ireland
has led to some culture clashes.

60. Laura Bush
USA - First Lady
Her husband's influence has steadily dropped during his presidency
due to the war in Iraq, among other issues, but Americans still
approve of U.S. first lady Laura Bush. The first lady's poll ratings
hit 85% at one point, the highest any first lady has ever seen.
HIV prevention in Africa, women's rights, and freedom are at the
top of her agenda. The first lady has made 14 solo foreign trips
to discuss these issues, among other items. She recently returned
from her third Africa tour of four countries there to talk about
issues affecting women, such as domestic violence and the president's
plan to spend $30 billion fighting HIV/AIDS over the next five
years. The first lady has also allied herself with Senate leaders
to call for the release of political prisoners worldwide. That
push also included a moving editorial in The Wall Street Journal
that the first lady penned, which called on Myanmar's ruling military
junta to release from house arrest Nobel Peace Prize laureate
Aung San Suu Kyi, the country's leader of its democratic movement
who won elections in 1990 (also a Forbes Power Woman).

77. Anne Sweeney
USA - President, Disney-ABC Television Group; Co-Chair, Disney
Media Networks
Recruited from Fox Television by Walt Disney Co. chief executive
Robert Iger, Sweeney negotiated Disney's first deal with iTunes,
which made ABC hits like Lost and Desperate Housewives available
for download. Sweeney is also the president of the Disney-ABC
Television Group and is responsible for Disney's entertainment
and news television properties globally. Her purview includes
the ABC Television Network, which encompasses ABC Entertainment,
ABC Kids, ABC Daytime and ABC News; Touchstone Television; and
Disney ABC Cable Networks Group, comprising Disney Channel Worldwide-which
has grown to 24 wholly-owned international channels-Toon Disney,
SOAPnet, ABC Family and Jetix. Prior to Disney, Sweeney had successful
runs at Nickelodeon and FX, where she oversaw the largest basic-cable
launch in history.
Yey Anne!
Again she made it in the top 100! What a darling, she is a fine
lady.
This will
bring us to the end of our 2007 list. It is most interesting to
read about how these movers and shakers had done it. I just love
women with brains, vision and power. A dumb broad with shaky ass,
can keep you focused for a limited time, once your done with the
sexual aspect, it is all over; however, ladies of intellect and
power can amuse you day in and day out. They can keep you focused
with their company, for the rest of your lives!
So girls,
MTV and People Magazine can get you so far. Your alternative will
be a bimbette on the stage or a bimbo on the spotlight! Train
your minds and exercise your brains, self educate yourselves and
sky will be the limit, the globe will be your stage and you will
become a power woman!
See you next
year
Dr.
X
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