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#11
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I think that the ideals espoused by feminism is a great idea. I would also agree that even if we aren't a feminist organization, being explictly put in our motto etc, it is strongly implied in our actions, humor, topics of interest etc. I thought that the artilce was interesting because it did touch on the fact that feminism has become a concept that society partially shunns. I wondered why is that, I had my own opinions, but I wanted to hear what you all felt.
I agree with DaB that often women are our own worst enimies. I am not sure if it is a social aspect of women, or a genetic one that predisposes us to make those choices. Sometimes I think that feminstic women who are polarizing act the way that they do not because they are women, but because they define themselves as 'not accepting a prescribed role'. Those choices have little to do with gender. Either way the societal construct of feminism needs to be re-evaluated, and being a assertive-women's group, we have a stake in that re-definition and how society percieves and operates within that construct. bah! I can't find the spell check on this version, please excuse the typos. I can NOT spell anything.
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Holly The Great The Erie Wench, Terminal Student Gentle when stroked, Fierce when provoked- Irish Brigade |
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#12
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Quote:
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AKA The Grammar Goddess - title bestowed by Ravin Raven Lusty 'Legs' MacBoom. Mommy of the Clan. "C'mere and let me kiss it better, honey..." "in vesta genua" "The man of my dreams must be as upright in bed as he is in the saddle!" Wench #2889 MCL... S.S.P.F. #3,Mistress of Oral Fixations... IFRP# 1194, Carpenter's Apprentice (Measurer of Wood) on The Wenches Pride PARENT is a VERB!!! Correlation: The children you have are the ones you raised Ergo: The children you have are the ones you deserve. Aww, did I just step on your poor, itty-bitty ego?(courtesy of Absinthe) I am free, no matter what rules surround me. If I find them tolerable, I tolerate them; if I find them too obnoxious, I break them. I am free because I know that I alone am morally responsible for everything I do. ~Robert A. Heinlein "When you find the person you want to spend the rest of your life with, you want the rest of your life to start as soon as possible" Last edited by Phoenix McHeit : 11-03-2009 at 02:38 PM. |
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#13
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That's a really good quote. I may have to steal that and put it on my Facebook page as well.
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"I believe in karma, what you give is what you get returned..." "What is faith? Is it to believe that which is evident? No. It is perfectly evident to my mind that there exists a necessary, eternal, supreme, and intelligent being. This is no matter of faith, but of reason." -Voltaire |
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#14
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daBaroness...most respectfully to ya lady... You need to send your post to every woman's magazine for publication! Huzzah!
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IWG #3765 Local #35 "Lush Mountains and Warm valleys" COUGAR # 88 IFRP #1491--One Eyed Dragon, First Mate. Augustine Androcton ![]() Proud Mother of a Navy Disabled Veteran aka. (Ceridwen). Other daughter is still serving on active duty. [ |
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#15
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Quote:
I'm in a funky mood tonight - algebra is giving me fits and bad flashbacks to 1972. One of my high school friends who is on FB posted this today and I just howled. Woman's Rule of Thumb: If it has tires or testicles, you're going to have trouble with it. ~Author Unknown |
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#16
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Weighing in...*waves with a fistful of Halloween MnM's*
I grew up in the 70's. I watched my mom go from being a full-time housewife (which she was pretty darn good at) to getting her own paycheck. She had no college education and her options for employment were rather limited by that; but she worked doggedly to raise my family's standard of living...sometimes at two simultaneous "nametag-and-a-hairnet" jobs for minimum wage. At no point did my father ever step up his game and do more than he was accustomed to (i.e. light yard work, basic mechanical/plumbing when needed--which translates loosely to "changing lightbulbs and plunging toilets"--and the occasional "listen to your mother" by way of parenting skills). Mom still cooked, cleaned, shopped, fluffed and folded, weeded the flowerbeds, painted the house, and played "bad cop" when disciplining three daughters. At no point did my father ever stop making snarky "women's Lib" commentary while belching, scratching and beer-guzzling in front of the television, barely lifting his feet out of the way of her canister vacuum. Dad put the "oink" in the phrase "male chauvinist pig". This woman, who adopted me during her first hellish marriage, and had to give BACK an adopted son because her first husband bolted on her before the paperwork was final--this woman who regularly worked like a farmhorse from bedraggled sunup to exhausted nightfall for her entire adult life--taught me lessons I'll carry with me the rest of my days. Those lessons weren't about feminism. They weren't even about humanism, or any other 'ism you might happen to have laying around. They were about fairness. They were about what a partnership--a friendship, a marriage, a committed relationship, whatever--is supposed to be. (Okay, that one was taught by negative example, but it was still powerful.) They were about being a decent, caring, contributing member of society, whether you pull a six-figure paycheck or raise six kids. She stayed for almost 30 years, until he turned a mental and emotional corner and became violently bipolar. (She stayed for all the reasons DaB mentioned, never realizing that what she was gaining by staying was in NO WAY a fair trade for her dignity and self-worth.) She was in her 50's, it was crisis time, and it could have crushed her. That's when her true mettle showed. She divorced him, sold the money pit that was our childhood home, and launched her independent, self-created future; for the first time in her life. A feminist might find my mother's early adulthood disappointing and crow about her later achievements. But see, my mom was no less amazing when she was ironing my dad's work shirts than she was when she bought a second apartment to become a landlady after her divorce. A woman who can swim upstream and make ANY sort of progress in today's world, no matter what her personal choices are for career/family/self-fulfillment; THAT is the definition of astounding. I could go further and say anyone, male or female, who lives a life of significance to another human being--is amazing. We aren't on the planet for long. It really does seem like so much "sound and fury, signifying nothing" to holler about whether it's more valid to stay home and raise children or be a corporate drone. It's time to stop pointing fingers and judging those who choose differently than we would. (Yes, I'm talking to you, feminazis...actually, to extremists on both ends of the spectrum.) Time to step up, accept that we all have strengths, apply those talents and get the #$*!ng work done, isn't it? My vote (since I'm a mom and a teacher) is that we need more stay-at-home parents of both genders...so many of our children lack guidance at the most basic levels; so many have no empathy, not enough conscience, nothing but a sense of "I'm entitled to __________, so fork it over and be quick about it." Meh, I know I'm rambling. And yes, we have come a very long way from the days of "female hysteria" and the idea that any man married to a working woman must be a failure as a male...but we also live in a world where girls still have their clitorises excised so that they won't feel sexual pleasure. Where women who aren't behind walls must be veiled so that their inherent ability to corrupt men's souls won't be flaunted. Progress is good. But every moment we waste in judgement is a moment lost for bringing the ethical-treatment scales into balance for everyone. (Yes, Dad. That's your "pinko-commie-daughter" talking. What can I say--my mother taught me well.)
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"Ah,weel...if ye bed wi' a vixen, ye must expect to get bit...Come here to me, vixen. Bite me some more." ~James Alexander Malcolm Mackenzie Fraser in Outlander Lesson Learned at CRF 2006: Lost Boys are salty! (Betcha can't eat just one!) "Cultivate your curves--they may be dangerous but they won't be avoided." --Mae West If laddies were doggies, furry, fully-grown, I'd pet them and let them come bury a bone...--Vix ![]() ![]() ![]() High Priestess of Vixynnism (thanks, Kyas!)![]() Exalted Instigator of all Things Surly "Dooo iiiit, dooo iiiit, you know you wanna!"I Got Nailed by BlueSilkRibbon at PARF on 10/21/06! 38.2% FaireFolk pure ...c'mon guys, corrupt me some more, won'tcha?
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#17
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Vix...
I don't think I've ever loved you more than at this moment. (And that's sayin' sumpin' !!! )
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AKA The Grammar Goddess - title bestowed by Ravin Raven Lusty 'Legs' MacBoom. Mommy of the Clan. "C'mere and let me kiss it better, honey..." "in vesta genua" "The man of my dreams must be as upright in bed as he is in the saddle!" Wench #2889 MCL... S.S.P.F. #3,Mistress of Oral Fixations... IFRP# 1194, Carpenter's Apprentice (Measurer of Wood) on The Wenches Pride PARENT is a VERB!!! Correlation: The children you have are the ones you raised Ergo: The children you have are the ones you deserve. Aww, did I just step on your poor, itty-bitty ego?(courtesy of Absinthe) I am free, no matter what rules surround me. If I find them tolerable, I tolerate them; if I find them too obnoxious, I break them. I am free because I know that I alone am morally responsible for everything I do. ~Robert A. Heinlein "When you find the person you want to spend the rest of your life with, you want the rest of your life to start as soon as possible" |
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