History has taught us when a country is in crisis, one of the first things to go is women’s rights. Many people are do not know what the word feminism means. Feminism is not the promotion of women over men.Femaninism is the establishment of equal opportunities for women. Therefore, supporting and nurturing women until that discrepancy is balanced, is not anti-equality.
The First-wave of Feminism occurred around women’s suffrage at the end of 19th and early 20th Century in the United States, and throughout the world. Women gained support globally from other women in Sweden, Netherlands, UK, Denmark, New Zealand, Persia, and Australia. Women learned that unity was an empowering strength and could facilitate positive change, and for many, a right to vote.
The Second Revolution, Second-wave of Feminism was between 1960-1970’s. The catalyst was against the 1873 Comstock Act. That statute defined contraceptives as obscene and illicit, making it a federal offense to disseminate birth control. Margret Sanger championed the rights of women to have access to contraception. This was not a Pro-choice vs. Pro-Life Debate, but for Prevention of Life. Before this point in history, men in political and religious power, have had control, for thousand of years, over a woman’s body.
Thank you to those women before us who challenged the status-quo for: equal pay for equal work, breaking the ceiling, and being written back into the fabric of history. Women need to find their place at the table.
But now women are looking to capitalism, not socialism, to again help women liberate themselves and secure control over their lives and bodies, fight against sexism, stop misogyny, and break the glass ceiling.
The Third- Wave of Feminism took place in the Arab Spring: Tunisia, Libya, Egypt, Yemen, and Syria. Three of the seven countries in the Trump Ban. These women had been supporting human equality across genders but hit resistance when women asserted their own rights as women. Women have bodies that are different from men, and they must overcome their challenges differently from men. That does not mean anti-equality.
In Africa, women have gained political power that women in the USA have never reached. Sadly, misogyny is infectious and in Liberia, Malawi, and South Africa. South African men and women reacted to a woman in power by pulling her down and attacking her with disparaging remarks regarding her physical appearance. Women inspire change.
When will we acknowledge the fact that that USA and the world need equality of women? It’s an amazing time to be on the cusp of a Revolution. A Movement, without violence and with dialogue. Women do not want to dominate; we want personal and family space, a career without limitations, and control over our bodies. We can never make America great when half of the team has been “benched” and are watching from the sidelines. It’s our future and women inspire change.
#womeninspirechange
#inspirechange.