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deeplydisturbed's Blog
Equality = Subjugation
Published 02/11/21 by deeplydisturbed [1 Comments]

Introduction

American women have been fighting for rights and privileges since the founding of the country. Men too have had to fight for rights; after all, the Revolution was a war over our Constitutional Rights. Likewise, non-land-owning white males gained the right to vote in 1828 – half a century after the Declaration of Independence.

With each right and privilege came new challenges and issues. This piece is an attempt to follow this timeline and hopefully present the conventional wisdom or zeitgeist that resulted.

Women’s Rights: A Timeline and Analysis

  • In July of 1848 during the first women’s rights convention. Elizabeth Stanton and Lucretia Mott were the organizers, and this convention marked the beginning of the feminist and women’s rights movement. There were a number of grievances made in the resultant Declaration of Sentiments, but primarily it was enfranchisement, the right to vote, and the right to work that got the most attention.

Result: Women gained a voice and were given due consideration by the Government.

  • Despite the claims made in that Declaration, hardly 6 months later, on January 23, 1849 Elizabeth Blackwell became the first woman to graduate from medical school in the US. It is unclear how these glaringly contradictory statements and facts were justified at the time, but the result:

Result: Women gained the right to attend college and become Medical Doctors.

  • In 1869, a mere forty years after white males earned the right to vote, the legislature of the territory of Wyoming passed America’s first woman suffrage law, granting women the right to vote and hold office. The 19th Amendment was to be ratified in 1920, so it took time for it to roll out to other states. But few people realize that by the time the 19th Amendment was passed, many women in the US were already voting.

Result: Women gained the right to vote

  • In 1916, Margaret Sanger opens the first birth control clinic in the United States. An organization that would later become planned parenthood. In 1960 the FDA approved the first birth control pill. Roe v Wade, in 1973 protected a woman’s right to abortion.

Result: Women gained total and absolute control over human reproduction

  • On June 10, 1963 President John F. Kennedy signed the Equal Pay Act, prohibiting sex-based wage discrimination between men and women performing the same job in the same workplace.

Result: Equal pay for women.

  • On June 23, 1972, President Nixon signed off on Title IX of the Education Amendments. This law stated that “No person in the United States shall, on the basis of sex, be excluded from participation in, be denied the benefits of, or be subjected to discrimination under any education program or activity receiving Federal financial assistance."

Result: Women were given full and complete access to higher education – including sports.

  • In 1994 then President Clinton signed “the Violence Against Women Act”. Among other things, this law provided funding for programs that help victims of domestic violence, rape, sexual assault, stalking and other gender-related violence.

Result: Women were given gender specific protection against several forms of violence.

  • In January 2013, the U.S. military removes a ban against women serving in combat positions.

Result: Women can now serve in “combat roles”


Analysis

Now, let’s look a bit deeper into the longer term consequences of these short term results.

Women gained a voice and were given due consideration by the Government.

Despite the myriad laws that specifically protect women, numerous articles have been written about women who still feel ignored. And despite the fact that their enfranchisement was voted on by 100% males, women also still feel that systemic sexism persists.

Women gained the right to attend college and become Medical Doctors

One needs no citation to acknowledge that women vastly outnumber men in Higher Education. Women also garner 92% of all gender specific scholarships. What was asked for was equality. What was gained was nearly total dominance – often irrespective of competence or merit.

Women gained the right to vote

Women now claim that women, who are denied the right to vote due to felony convictions, are victims of sexism. They claim that this is evidence of sexist AND racist disenfranchisement. No equal mention of men who are convicted of felonies.

Women gained total and absolute control over human reproduction

Single motherhood has become the norm in the US. And it has been well established that children raised in single parent households perform poorly by almost every important metric of health and well-being.

Furthermore, boys raised by single mothers fare worse than almost any single demographic. In one study, it was shown that 72% of juvenile murderers, and 60% of rapists came from single mother homes.

Equal pay for women.

Women’s rights activists still claim that the wage gap still exists due to systemic misogyny; despite the fact that this claim has been resoundingly debunked, and can be explained by women’s career and job choices.

Women were given full and complete access to higher education – including sports.

Women who fought for parity and equality for well over two centuries, are now acting with as much bigotry as those whom they decried along the way. Transgendered athletes are being discriminated against by more than just TERFS. Apparently men are horrible – even when they become women. Whether one agrees on this point or not, transgendered people are making the very same case that early women used to change laws. If the logic is wrong now, it was wrong then.

Women were given gender specific protection against several forms of violence.

The Duluth model is used as a weapon against all men, regardless of merit or evidence. According to the Wikipedia page: “The feminist theory underlying the Duluth Model is that men use violence within relationships to exercise power and control.” All because one woman had a theory. Key word: Theory

Women can now serve in “combat roles”

The selective service is mandatory for men. Not only is conscription optional for women, but the combat roles are optional for women as well. This serves as a backdoor way to promote women to higher ranks in the military, without the same level of overall risk to life and limb.

Conclusion

The more equality women have gained, the more loudly the cries of sexism and oppression have become. No matter how much progress has been made, the average American woman unironically seems to believe that things are worse than ever for women.

Every single major milestone in the women’s rights movement was explicitly based on demands for equality, but every single one of these milestones has resulted, not only in Inequality, but unacceptable negative consequences men. These consequences range from fewer opportunities, to unjust incarceration, to out right death.

On moral grounds alone, these results are unacceptable.

Let's see someone print that.

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Comment by Typo-MAGAshiv on 02/27/21 05:41pm

Great work. Just one small correction.

the Revolution was a war over our Constitutional Rights

The American Revolution was fought over the grievances outlined in the Declaration of Independence. The Constitution wasn't ratified until much later.


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