No, you see, that’s the problem. Reproduction is not the “basic function of being a woman”. Women are MUCH MORE than they’re capacity to reproduce.
Intersectionality is not optional. It is not something you can take off and put back on again at will, when you feel like it. An intersectional lens...
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notes found in the girls bathroom on my campus
Yeah, this video is what triggered me yesterday. Then I...
Coercion is sexual assault.
So this just happened, and I’m sure she’ll have a great reply back, but here is just some blatant transphobia I’m getting right now on Facebook…I figured I’d feel better if I put it on here.
Ugh. I know it probably doesn’t help to just say she is an ignorant, uneducated idiot, but she is. I feel like people like her shouldn’t even have their names blurred out because they’re hateful, and even when confronted about it, are unwilling to change.
So, I’ve been trying to tutor my little 12 year old friend on getting a guy since she “fell in love with one” and her mother is not a mother, is completely horrible, and doesn’t help her with pretty much anything.
I probably should have archived them for people or my kids or something.
But here’s a few that stand out in my mind.
Because a lot of people are alone in Columbus. But there’s probably a good reason you’re alone.
One, that comes to right mind knowing, is quit being a slut. A man, even if he is a pig, has standards and does not want to be with you if just put out to everyone. Why would he buy milk IF HE GETS THE COW FOR FREE. Plus, it’s just unclean and you have a sense that you’re desparate and needy as hell. Don’t have sex for a while (like at least 3-6 months people, but I’d wait longer) because any respectable man that you actually want to be with (in America anyway) will appreciate you wanting to know more about him than his penis.
#2. Girls like to manipulate men. STOP MANIPULATING MEN. This is why men are dicks, and why men make more bitches. Like with my friend. There’s another boy that likes her, and she wanted to flirt with that boy to make the guy she liked jealous to make him “admit his love and come to her.” NO. NO. NO. NO. NO. NO! (NIEN!) Her mother even told her to do this! and I was like how many times has your mother been married. 3 times? EXACTLY. Most men are not going to get jealous and come to you. He’s going to LEAVE and let you have him, since he’s worth your time. Let your man know you like him. BE UPFRONT AND STRONG. Men like women like that.
#3 Most men like women that are self-confident and don’t cry about how much they suck all the time. Gentlemen realize that you’re a woman and you pms and you hurt and get irrtated, but you can’t act like that all the time. That’s too much. Stop being a bitter bitch. That’s not going to get you ANYWHERE.
#4 Tell the guy what you actually mean. He knows “I’m fine” is at least American for “I’m so pissed right now” Men obsess over things more than women do, and it drives him insane.
#5 Sometimes it’s not you. It’s the men in the area, but honestly, knowing women, this is rare.
Those are all I can think of right now…But I have been in a relationship for a wonderful man for 3 years :) I love all my haters. <3 I know you’re all jelly irl :D
I’m loving the rampant slut-shaming here! Your worth is not associated with your sexual activity or your body.
The best way to get someone you should be with is to BE YOURSELF.
Stop telling women and girls that they should change and cater to men.
From: Julia Maddera, Georgetown University ‘13.
To the first man, who I met by the Eiffel Tower my second week in Paris, when I didn’t know better. Who took me out four times, who waved little red flags that I tried to ignore. Like asking me outright if I was a virgin on the first date, like calling me five different pet names when I’d asked him not to throughout the second, like saying he’d heard that feminists were not real women during the third, like disappearing for a week and a half after the fourth. Who, as it turns out, was not the bullet, but the careening fourteen-wheeler that I narrowly managed to dodge. Who admitted that he hit the young woman that his mother was trying to force him to marry. Who didn’t want to marry her because he believes in romantic love. Who doesn’t see the contradiction in those two sentences.
To the guy in my medieval literature class, who lent me one of Camus’ plays and showed me around the library. Who wants to use his French education not to escape to the West, but to go back to his third-world home country to teach at its eight-year-old university. Who I admired until he asked me what my American boyfriend had thought about me coming to Paris, until he demanded to know why I didn’t have one (a boyfriend, that is), until he asked if it was required that I marry an American. Who reached out and touched my earrings, without asking, the next time he saw me. Who won’t take a hint.
To the PhD student who tried to take me up to his apartment after a five minute conversation, when I had just wanted to get lunch, who said there’s a first time for everything. Who told me that we were university students, living in a 21st century democracy, and that relations between men and women were different now, so what was I so scared of? Who recoiled in shock when I told him that I had friends who’d been raped, and by other university students, at that. Who does not have to think about rape on a daily basis. Who insisted on paying for my lunch, because “it was a matter of honor.” Who then physically prevented me from handing my money to the cashier, when I was trying to make it clear that this was not a date. Who didn’t believe me when I said I didn’t want a boyfriend, five times. Whose number I blocked the moment I stepped on the metro. Who has called me three times since. Who told me he wants to go into Senegalese politics. Who, I can only hope, will listen to the women of his country better than he listened to me.
To the delivery guy on the red motorcycle idling outside of the apartments on Avenue de Porte de Vanves, the ones I walk past every day, who said bonsoir and who, because I said it in return to be polite, followed me to the metro as I walked, head twisted down, pretending that I didn’t understand the language I’ve studied for eight years.
To the two men Thursday night in le Marais, swaggering drunk toward me, ignoring the male friend standing by my side, who leered at my chest and slurred, “Bonsoir, comme tu es mignonne,” as I shoved past them, trying to sound angry, not afraid. Who left me feeling fidgety and panicked, so when I took the night bus in the wrong direction and found myself alone with two other strange men at a bus stop at 2:30 A.M., I let the cab driver fleece me out of 25 euro just to take a taxi home.
To the group of teenage boys loitering on the corner by my apartment, who decided to sound a siren at my approach because I was wearing a knee-length dress and a bulky sweater. Who made me regret forgoing tights because I had wanted to feel the spring air on my calves for once. Who will never have to wear an itchy pair of pantyhose in their entire lives. To whom I said nothing, because I still have to walk past that corner twice a day for the next three-and-a-half months, because there were five of them and one of me.
To the three men standing on the corner of the periphery five minutes later when I was crossing the street. To the one who motioned for his friends to turn and look at me, quick, and then left his wolf-whistle ringing in my ears, shame like sunburn covering my face. Who didn’t care that it was broad daylight. Who made me wish that I could swear a blue streak back in French, without my accent betraying that I am American, which is another word for “easy” here.
To the two men at sunset on the bridge by Saint Michel, in the middle of tourist central, who made skeeting noises at me, like a pair of sputtering mosquitoes, to get my attention. Who laughed when I flipped them off, and who kept hissing at me anyway. Who forced me to keep checking over my shoulder, all the way to the metro, to make sure that I wasn’t being followed.
But also to the French friend who blamed my problems with French men on my university in the northern suburbs, a Parisian synonym for emeutes, gang violence, and immigration. Who insisted that if he brought me to his upper-crust private (white) university—where the French elite reproduces itself into perpetuity—I would meet nicer French guys. Who forced me to defend the men who’d harassed me against his barely-veiled, racist critique.
And also to the American friend at home who nearly rolled his eyes as he half-listened to my stories, who said, “Oh god, it’s hard being so attractive, isn’t it?” as if I was being vain. Who laughs and does not understand why I always duck out of the frame of photographs, who knows nothing of what my body means to me.
And that’s just two months in Paris.
To all the Italian men who made me wish I had dyed my hair black before studying in Florence, who kept me from going out dancing because I got sick of feeling them creeping up behind me, sneaking their hands around my waist (and lower) when I’d already said NO three times.
To the six-foot-something Georgetown student who prided himself on protecting the girls from being groped on the dance floor. Who chose to write about the rape of the Sabine woman for that week’s assignment. Who described the way her breast slipped free of her tunic when she fell, as if he was writing a porno, not a rape scene, who had the woman fall in love with her Roman rapist the next morning, after he spun her a tale of the coming glory of his country. Who said “in a fit of passion, she thrust herself upon his member” and was not joking. Who ended the story with the titular character saying to her children that she had been raped, but only at first.
To the seventh-grade boy who told my younger sister that he could rape her, if he wanted to.
To the gang of twenty-five year-olds in the Jeep who hollered at her as they drove past, leering at her thirteen-year-old body dressed in sweat pants and a tank top. Who made my sister, fearless on the soccer field and in the classroom and in the karate studio, run home crying. Who were the reason she became afraid to walk the dog by herself in our “safe, suburban” neighborhood.
To my father, who said, “What white male privilege?” Who was not being ironic.
“If you don’t have the maturity to trust that your “this is just sex, kay?” negotiations were real and that women aren’t all secretly trying to entrap men in their relationship-tentacles, you don’t have the maturity to be a fuckbuddy.
Friends with benefits are supposed to be “friends with benefits,” not “strangers with body parts.” ”
So you wanna talk about male privilege? Let’s talk about female privilege for a second. Case in point, girls can make out with each other and its considered beautiful or desired, but if a guy makes out with another guy? Disgusting.
Ok, let’s talk about female privilege.
It’s…
Intersectionality is not optional. It is not something you can take off and put back on again at will, when you feel like it. An intersectional lens should inform any critical evaluation of a subject, because these connections are key to understanding the web of oppression that weighs down on us all. These interconnections, too, are very weblike in their nature, because when you tweak one string, all the rest vibrate with it. There is no way to separate these things out from each other.
People complain that people keep dragging ‘side issues’ into ‘their movement’ and they don’t understand that these issues are the movement. Because a movement that commits oppression in the name of liberation is not a good movement, to put it bluntly. We are more vocal about these issues because we have learned the cost of shutting up, because we constantly have to remind people, because the minute we stop, everything returns to the way it was, the status quo is reestablished, and the real structural and institutional problems that create inequality go, once again, uninterrogated.
This is all connected. To misquote Patrick Henry for a moment, give me intersectionality, or give me death. This is not hyperbole: The current system, as it stands, is killing me. It is killing my people. It is killing the people I work in solidarity with. It is killing you. If you do not give me intersectionality, if you will not commit to being intersectional in your deeds, your thinking, your doing, all the time, no matter how you identify your politics, you are killing me.
Yeah, this video is what triggered me yesterday. Then I read Geraldo’s bullshit this morning and I fucking lost it.
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If that doesn’t make you rage enough, or if you’re one of those people who still believe we’re in a “post-racial” society, take a look at this.
At a campaign stop at a firing range, while Rick Santorum was firing off some rounds, a woman shouted, “pretend it’s Obama.”
I need to get the fuck out of this country.
I’m starting to think the scariest thing in the world is bigoted white people. :(
Bullshit…anybody can be racist and you saying that the scariest thing in the world is bigoted white people personally hurts me.
There’s room for divergent opinions here. Please, tell us how you feel about bigoted white people.
Thank you for not acting like a tool and I believe bigoted people in general are horrible…the race of a bigot shouldn’t matter because that is racist also to the ass monkeys who kept insulting me I am a bisexual male who wants to become a transexual female…I can assure you that I don’t have any godamn privilege. Also what happened to this kid was horrible but that doesn’t mean we all have to insult white people in some kind of weird hateful circlejerk.
“I can assure you that I don’t have any godamn privilege”
Privilege isn’t cancelled out by areas where you don’t have privilege. I can assure that you do have privilege.