As I started reading The Power Chapter, I understood how power plays a really big role in our everyday life, how us as individuals are treated differently based on our gender, race or other factors. D’Ignazio and Klein make a very good point by changing the “what” from CDC official’s quote to “who”, which shifts the attention to why some people are given priority over other people and why does this privilege exist. We notice in the Serena William’s example that she only realized that other woman, mostly black woman, had been experiencing childbirth complications only after she posted on Facebook about her own experience at childbirth. This means that people started listening when a powerful person such as Serena Williams started speaking up about this issue. Serena William’s example of childbirth complications is important in examining power because it shows how even woman are not treated the same based on the power they hold. It took Serena Williams to come forward about her experience at childbirth so media would start paying more attention and hospitals would start collecting data about this issue. The state of data collection on maternal mortality in the US was described as “particularly weak” by a United Nations report in 2014, which shows how woman’s childbirth complications are not considered as important as other health diseases, not even having a systemic data collection. Woman’s health is as important as any other health problems we might experience, therefore there should be equal effort be put into it as we do on other cases. Serena Williams’s life is not more important than any other woman’s life just because she is a “23 times grand slam champion”. This is where we see how power comes into play in our everyday life and how oppression forces are still strong even though it’s hard to see them.