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Elizabeth Cady Stanton And The Women's Rights Movement

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The freedom for women to have equal rights is simply the fact that women deserve and have the right to be equal to their male counterparts. The definition may be simple, but the right is extremely complex in all dimensions. Countless women and men have fought and been persecuted for women to be where they are today, but they have a long road ahead of them. The sex in which they are born should not affect what they can do or what society thinks they can do. They will and must stand up for their rights. Elizabeth Cady Stanton had an enormous impact on the Women’s Rights Movement. She was born in 1815 in Johnstown, New York and died in 1902. During her lifetime she led the National Women’s Suffrage Movement from 1869-1890 and coedited a feminist …show more content…

The rights and opportunities are different but the feelings in the hearts of those fighting and living to support women’s rights have never changed. Some of the issues women are fighting today are poverty and hunger with the largest number of homeless being women and children. The continuing wage gap and the fact that women make 77 cents to every dollar men do, violence against women, with the staggering statistic that there are 270,000 rapes or sexual assaults a year. Women are treated poorly in prison with 70% subject to rape, extortion, and groping and denied medical resources and treatment, as well as human trafficking and sex slavery, which has a 32 billion dollar annual income. (Top 18 Issues Challenging Women …show more content…

This has come from many years of idolizing white womanhood. They look up to individuals so highly that they see them as invincible, which contributes to this feeling. Supreme Court justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, a revered feminist said Colin Kaepernick's (NFL player) protest was “dumb” and “arrogant.” This hit many individuals many different ways, some positive and some negative. She is looked up to as a big player in women’s rights today and her actions show they are capable of harm, and not above it. It seems some individuals have realized women see themselves as invincible. This is seen in pop culture when there are “complicated” or “messy” female protagonists in TV shows. Many of them are antiheroes, or central characters in a story, movie, or drama who lack conventional heroic attributes.

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