Eve was Framed.

Holly, 19. I'm too opinionated for my own good. here is a collection of my feminist rants, interesting articles and random musings from my life.
tee hee, my dear friend luke just linked me to this - made in regards to the article on jezebel about how women should be more like parisian women - and be liberated through forgetting about consent… article can be found here

tee hee, my dear friend luke just linked me to this - made in regards to the article on jezebel about how women should be more like parisian women - and be liberated through forgetting about consent… article can be found here

Day Three: A female character you hated but grew to love

Alice Piezecki from the L word

Day Three: A female character you hated but grew to love

Alice Piezecki from the L word

day four: a photo of the last place you went on holiday

The blue mountains - YAY!

day four: a photo of the last place you went on holiday

The blue mountains - YAY!

cunthorse:

dr-grumbles:

wannabephd:

charlottecorday:

Photograph of Alison Turnbull Hopkins with banner, “Mr. President How long must women wait for liberty,” picketing for suffrage outside White House gate. Photograph published in The Suffragist, 5, no. 56 (Feb. 7, 1917).

Well… It’s been almost a hundred years since this photo was taken….
WHY ARE WE STILL ASKING THIS QUESTION?

 Why aren’t more of us asking this question.

Because privileged people (men and women) think that procedural equality is enough. They don’t realise that because they’ve never been the victim of social inequality doesn’t mean it doesn’t happen. That or they don’t ‘mind’ it because of internalised sexism.

cunthorse:

dr-grumbles:

wannabephd:

charlottecorday:

Photograph of Alison Turnbull Hopkins with banner, “Mr. President How long must women wait for liberty,” picketing for suffrage outside White House gate. Photograph published in The Suffragist, 5, no. 56 (Feb. 7, 1917).

Well… It’s been almost a hundred years since this photo was taken….

WHY ARE WE STILL ASKING THIS QUESTION?

 Why aren’t more of us asking this question.

Because privileged people (men and women) think that procedural equality is enough. They don’t realise that because they’ve never been the victim of social inequality doesn’t mean it doesn’t happen. That or they don’t ‘mind’ it because of internalised sexism.

(Source: parasini, via thefeministhub)