Part one had someone come in and try to rebuke my argument. This individual took the time to watch the video and stated that the Women's Liberation Movement gave me the right to do these videos. No. Women were in the mass media in the 1920s radio shows. And writing articles.
January 4, 1739, Elizabeth Timothy became the first American woman to be a publisher of a newspaper in the colonies. A time when women didn’t leave her home without her husband’s permission. Mrs. Timothy was running a paper.
Women College Graduates before Women’s Liberation Nonsense!
Catherine Bensen Brewer was the woman recorded to graduate from Wesleyan College in Macon Georgia. She graduated on July 16, 1843.
In 1849 Elizbeth Blackwell got her medical degree from Yale School of Medicine her sister Emily Blackwell also got a medical degree from the same school.
In 1869, Arabella Mansfield became the first American woman to become a lawyer.
In 1862, Mary Jane Patterson became the first Black woman, on record, to receive a bachelor in twelve years in education.
In the 1920s, women got the right to vote because of Susan B Anthony.
I am giving you this information to show that women’s liberation didn’t accomplish anything that we as women are brainwashed to believe. It simply didn’t work as we were told. As for the equal pay nonsense, it was started by Alice Paul in 1923. According to Forbes (www.forbes.com), a woman will make $.84 to a man’s $1.00. That means for every one dollar a man makes a woman doing the exact job with the same qualifications will make $.16 less than a man. Here is some more information to roll around your mind. In 1949 the IRS only collected approximately $70 billion dollars in revenue. That was when only men worked in the public sector. In 1980 it was $1.3 trillion in revenue going to the IRS. That is a massive jump. Why are these years important? Up till 1949, it was once again men in the workplace. Women did what God intended us to do; be homemakers and moms. In late 1977 the ERA went into the Constitution, you know that paper certain people want ripped up and thrown away, which made it mandatory for women to be OFFERED equal pay. I said offered at some point. Not guaranteed.
In 1959 there were roughly about 6,742 women in state prisons and 882 in federal prisons. In 1979, 20 years later, and post women’s liberation nonsense those numbers jumped to 10,679 in state prisons and 1,326 in federal. Let’s look at today’s numbers. There are approximately 190,600 women in prison as of May 25, 2024. That is a huge jump. I am only looking at women. Naturally born women. Do you people still think women’s liberation made society better? I would say no. There are more women committing crimes today than pre-women’s lib nonsense. Let’s look at the wonderful American education system.
When I was in school, I had to take Home Economics in Junior high and high school along with child development. In the 1990s it was removed in favor of curriculum leaning more toward college. We’ve been given all kinds of stupid reasons. Budgets were tight. But they had the budget for sports programs, specifically boys. Also, my favorite is the change in social norms. Yeah! Overall this class was removed in favor of college-based classes. This means girls DIDN’T have a choice of taking these type of classes. Why would schools offer them to encourage girls to have a choice between going to college or being a stay-at-home mom and wife as God intended? So I think you know what part 3 will be. Yep! How to reverse the damage the women’s liberation nonsense has done.
References
(n.d.). Wikipedia. Retrieved May 30, 2024, from https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Kebw5LZNmXg&list=LL&index=8
,. (2023, January 6). , - YouTube. Retrieved May 30, 2024, from https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1002/9781119429128.iegmc110
Benilous, B. (2011, March 13). Women's History Month: Pioneers of American Journalism. The Morning Delivery. Retrieved May 30, 2024, from https://www.wplucey.com/2011/03/womens-history-month-pioneers-of-american-journalism.html
Catherine Brewer Benson - Macon. (n.d.). Wesleyan College. Retrieved May 30, 2024, from https://www.wesleyancollege.edu/academics/Commencement/catherine-brewer-benson.cfm
Garner, C. (2010, December 3). Mary Jane Patterson (1840-1894) •. Blackpast. Retrieved May 30, 2024, from https://www.blackpast.org/african-american-history/patterson-mary-jane-1840-1894/
Home Ec: Why It Disappeared and How It's Coming Back. (2023, October 17). LinkedIn. Retrieved May 30, 2024, from https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/home-ec-why-disappeared-how-its-coming-back-takehomeec-p0g8f
Reilly, K., & Haan, K. (2024, March 1). Gender Pay Gap Statistics In 2024 – Forbes Advisor. Forbes. Retrieved May 30, 2024, from https://www.forbes.com/advisor/business/gender-pay-gap-statistics/
Sawyer, W. (n.d.). The Gender Divide: Table 1. Prison Policy Initiative. Retrieved May 30, 2024, from https://www.prisonpolicy.org/reports/women_overtime_table_1.html
Timeline of women lawyers. (n.d.). Wikipedia. Retrieved May 30, 2024, from https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Timeline_of_women_lawyers
Women physicians over the centuries < Yale School of Medicine. (n.d.). Yale School of Medicine. Retrieved May 30, 2024, from https://medicine.yale.edu/news/yale-medicine-magazine/article/women-physicians-over-the-centuries/
https://youtu.be/cF6GvSxQZ34
Comments
Post a Comment