The girls who tweet shit like “I’m toooooo pretty to work omg” are getting sent to the assembly lines first
Still can’t believe they canceled to catch a predator bc one of the predators killed himself. That should’ve been like the goal of the whole program from the jump this world I swear
Getting very sick of trans-identified men making creepy, voyeuristic media about the violence and suffering that women and girls experience at the hands of men.
Suffragettes didn't just fight for women's voting rights.
They fought for the right for women to own property, domestic violence protections, the right to initiate divorce, the right to have legal standing in courts, the right to obtain guardianship of their children during instances of divorce.
I'm sure you've heard men complain about women always getting custody in court, but prior to World War I, in cases of separation, men obtained guardianship of kids.
The right to an equal education, domestic violence protections, the right to not just vote but run for political office, advocating against the prostitution of women.
Here's a suffragette trying to persuade a sea of men about these things:
corporations be like “noooooo women please fuck your natural predator or we won’t have more consumers to generate more profits in the next decade pleaaasssuuuhhh😩😩”
Discover Radical Feminism
Radical Feminism:
Authors, Theorists, Ideologues:
Sheila Jeffreys
Janice Raymond
Gail Dines
Catharine MacKinnon
Andrea Dworkin
Andrea Dworkin has a lot of gender critical and anti-porn books. Bell Hooks is also a black woman who has written a lot of books, and her book Ain’t I A Woman deals specifically with the intersections of misogyny and racism. This page (http://radfemresource.tumblr.com/resources) also has numerous sources.
Hope this helps!
On systematic male against female violence:
Femicide: The Politics of Woman Killing (Anthology) , http://www.dianarussell.com/f/femicde%28small%29.pdf
THE ORIGIN AND IMPORTANCE OF THE TERM FEMICIDE
December 2011, written by Diana E.H Russell, Ph.D
Femicide – The Power of a Name
The Rise of Femicide: Can Naming a Deadly Crime Help Prevent It?, by Aaron Schulman. The New Republic. December 29, 2010
On the issues that pornography presents feminists and ways we can challenge them:
Making Violence Sexy (Anthology), http://www.dianarussell.com/f/makingviolencesexy%28smaller%29.pdf
On the psychological and behavioral consequences of pornography consumption:
Ph.D Diana E. H. Russell, “Pornography & Rape: A Causal Model”. Vol. 9, No. 1 (Mar., 1988), Published by: International Society of Political Psychology.
Exposure to Pornography As a Cause of Child Sexual Victimization
Stolen Innocence: The Damaging Effects of Child Pornography- On and Off the Internet
http://cyber.law.harvard.edu/VAW02/mod2-6b.htm
The Price of Pleasure: Pornography, Sexuality, and Relationships (2007/2008), http://www.antipornography.org/Price_of_Pleasure_doc.html (Warning: censored nudity but some of the content remains graphic and disturbing. Potentially triggering).
Pornography FAQ (http://catwa.org.au/?q=node/67 ):
How is pornography related to prostitution?
Pornography and prostitution are often thought of as completely separate entities. In many parts of the world, this is even reflected in law where pornography and prostitution hold very different positions; pornography is often privileged as a form of ‘representation’. Pornography, however, is filmed prostitution. Both pornography and prostitution involve the sexual use of women in exchange for money. Often, the only difference between the two is the presence of a camera. Pornography can also be seen to increase the legitimacy of prostitution, by depicting the commercial sexual exploitation of women as entertaining, glamorous and acceptable. In addition, pornography is frequently used by pimps to ‘season’ or train women for prostitution and in a rather cyclical relationship, women used in prostitution are often also used in pornography.
Shouldn’t pornography be protected as free speech?
It is important to note that pornography is not speech but rather filmed acts of prostitution. Pornography is not merely the representation of sex acts, but involves the filming of real sex acts, performed by real people. Arguing that pornography is speech, ignores the realities of how pornography is actually produced and also ignores the harm to women that pornography both generates and reinforces.
Read: Only Words, by Catharine MacKinnon Isn’t porn just harmless sex?
There is no such thing as harmless pornography. Many people believe pornography to simply be sex between ‘consenting adults’ rather than understanding pornography as a multi-billion dollar industry. Pornography is not ‘just sex’, it is a particular construction of sex which involves the commercial sexual exploitation of women for the purpose of men’s sexual pleasure. Pornography harms both the women who are directly abused in the making of it, and also women as a group more generally. It promotes a model of sexuality which is incompatible with women’s equality.“[P]ornography plays an important part in contributing to sexual violence against women and to sex discrimination and sex inequality” - Catherine Itzin Pornography: Women violence and civil liberties. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1992 (p. 1).
Isn’t pornography a good sexual outlet for men?
The idea that pornography creates a useful sexual release for men, assumes that men have uncontrollable sexual ‘urges’ which require an outlet. It also assumes that pornography use is acceptable and healthy. Neither is the case. Pornography use is harmful to the women used in creating it, and pornography creates and reinforces harmful ideas about women, sex and sexuality; for example, that women enjoy or welcome unwanted sexual contact and sexual assault. Rather than reducing the likelihood that men will act out, it creates a culture in which women are increasingly objectified and viewed as commodities. Such a culture helps to fuel, rather than prevent, acts of sexual violence.
Doesn’t opposing pornography make you a prude?
Many people assume that the only reason to oppose pornography is because you find it personally ‘offensive’ or are ‘anti-sex’. Opposing pornography means that you oppose abusive sexual practices that harm women, not that you must oppose all sex. Nor does opposing pornography have to be about arguing that its content personally offends you. From a feminist perspective, it is not necessarily explicitness or the depiction of sex which is the problem with pornography. It is not about offence and decency, but about harm. “What is objectionable about pornography…is its abusive and degrading portrayal of females and female sexuality, not its sexual content or explicitness” – Diana Russell Dangerous relationships: Pornography, misogyny, and rape. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage Publications, 1998 (p. 5).
What is pornification?
Pornification, sometimes referred to as pornographication or ‘raunch culture’ is the increasing distribution and acceptance of pornography as well as the fragmenting and blurring of pornography and pornographic imagery into popular culture. Pornography and pornographic imagery are infiltrating popular music videos, outdoor advertising, fashion and art to name but a few. While pornographication is sometimes viewed as simply the increasing acceptance of sexual themes in media, it is actually the promotion of a particular model of sex which is harmful to women. The mainstreaming of this type of pornographic sexuality which fundamentally objectifies women, is already harming the development of young women and girls. The American Psychological Association, for example, has linked the rise of this unhealthy model of sexuality to increases in mental health problems such as eating disorders, low self-esteem, and depression. See: Report of the APA Task Force on the Sexualization of Girls (2007). Available from:http://www.apa.org/pi/wpo/sexualization.
Legalisation of Prostitution
Brothels without Walls: The Escort Sector as a Problem for the Legalization of Prostitution, bySheila Jeffreys 2010
What Happens When Prostitution Becomes Work? An Update on Legalisation of Prostitution in Australia. A paper by Mary Sullivan, 2005 (CATWA)
Submission to New Zealand Parliament, CATWA 2003
Prostitution Culture: Legalised Brothel Prostitution in Victoria, Australia Sheila Jeffreys 2002. Talk given at Swedish Ministry of Gender Equality Seminar on the Effect of Legalisation of Prostitution. Stockholm, 6 November 2002.
The Legalisation of Prostitution: A failed social experiment, by Sheila Jeffreys
Legalising Prostitution is not the Answer: The example of Victoria, Australia by Mary Sullivan and Sheila Jeffreys
Trafficking
Protocol to Prevent, Suppress and Punish Trafficking in Persons (2000) (Known as the Palermo Protocol)
A Guide to the UN Trafficking Protocol (2001)
Sex Trafficking and Human Rights
Marriage Trafficking
Pornography and Pornification
The global industry of pornography is growing rapidly. The business of pornography is now worth in excess of $57 billion worldwide. More than $10 billion is generated in the United States alone. Pornography is an industry which, like prostitution, makes its ever increasing profits from the sexual exploitation of women and girls. Women in both the pornography and prostitution industries suffer abuse and violence. Despite this grim reality, tolerance for pornography is increasing in Australia and many other Western nations. Through the ‘mainstreaming of pornography’ or ‘pornification,’ pornographic imagery and even pornography itself are gaining legitimacy and a degree of glamour and cultural chic. Porn stars are becoming household names, advertising mimics pornographic conventions and poses, and Playboy is not just a magazine but a global brand that markets everything from clothing to stationery. The mainstreaming of pornography is also changing our conceptions of sexuality. Women are increasingly becoming required to perform sex acts straight from pornography in their everyday heterosexual relationships, and the pornographic model of sexuality is harming girls’ and women’s concepts of self. As pornography continues to become more prominent and pornographic imagery becomes more ‘mainstreamed’ we become accustomed to living in a pornified world in which it is acceptable that women and girls can be bought and sold.
Boyle, Karen (ed). (2010). Everyday Pornography. Oxford: Routledge.
Dines, Gail. (2010). Pornland: How Porn has Highjacked our Sexuality. Melbourne: Spinifex Press.
Dines, Gail & Jensen, Robert & Russo, Ann. (1998). Pornography: The Production and Consumption of Inequality. New York: Routledge.
Dworkin, Andrea. (1979) Men Possessing Women. New York: Pedigree Books.
Long, Julia. (2012). Anti-Porn: The resurgence of Anti-Pornography Feminism. Zed Books.
Tankard Reist, Melinda & Bray, Abigail (eds) (2011). Big Porn Inc: Exposing the Harms of the Global Pornography Industry. Melbourne: Spinifex Press.
Tyler, Meagan (2011). Selling Sex Short: The Pornographic and Sexological Construction of Women’s Sexuality in the West. Newcastle upon Tyne: Cambridge Scholars Publishing.
Strip Clubs
Read CATWA’s indepth report on strip clubs in Victoria (2010).
The sex industry and business practice: An obstacle to women’s equality, by Sheila Jeffreys 2010
Jul 2014: Business women suffer discrimination because of the male executive culture of strip club visits.
Jul 2014: Executive director of UN Women Australia calls for zero tolerance of strip club visits
Dec 2010: ABC radio interview with Sheila Jeffreys on ’Why strip clubs are harmful to women and the community’. Includes transcript
Dec 2010: Corporate functions and Christmas parties at strip clubs
On the feminist activist struggles against woman-battering, rape, misogyny (Right Wing and Left Wing), gendered oppression, hatred of lesbians, prostitution, pornography, societal stockholm syndrome, female-only spaces and more.:
Letters from a War Zone, by Andrea Dworkin
Our Blood, by Andrea Dworkin
Right-Wing Women, by Andrea Dworkin
Pornography: Andrea Dworkin (1991) - Documentary
Pornography: Men Possessing Women, by Andrea Dworkin
http://radfem.org/dworkin/
Against Our Will, Susan Brownmiller
Femininity, by Susan Brownmiller
Rape In Marriage, Diana Russell
Women-Only Spaces: An Alternative To Patriarchy, by Jennie Ruby
Exploring the Value of Women-Only Space, by Kya Ogyn
Women, Health and the Politics of Fat, Amy Winter, in Rain And Thunder, Autumn Equinox 2003, No. 20
Free Space: A Perspective on the Small Group in Women’s Liberation by Pamela Allen 1970 Download PDF
Loving to Survive: Sexual Terror, Men’s Violence, and Women’s Lives by Dee Graham, Roberta Rigsby, Edna Rawlings 1995 Download PDF
Nothing Mat(t)ers: A Feminist Critique of Postmodernism by Somer Brodribb 1992 Download PDF
A deafening silence: Hidden violence against women and children by Patrizia Romito (translation by Janet Eastwood) 2008 Download PDF
Are Prisons Obsolete? by Angela Y. Davis 2003 Download PDF
Refusing to be a Man: Essays on Sex and Justice by John Stoltenberg 2000 2nd Ed. Download PDF
I Am Your Sister: Collected and Unpublished Writings of Audre Lorde ed by Rudolph P. Byrd, Johnnetta Betsch Cole, Beverly Guy-Sheftall 2011 Download PDF
Beyond the Frame: Women of Color and Visual Representation ed by Neferti X. M. Tadiar, Angela Davis 2005 Download PDF
Beauty and Misogyny: Harmful Cultural Practices in the West by Sheila Jeffreys 2005 Download PDF
The Spinster and Her Enemies by Sheila Jeffreys 1997 Download PDF
The Lesbian Heresy by Sheila Jeffreys 1993 Download PDF
The Industrial Vagina: The Political Economy of the Global Sex Trade by Sheila Jeffreys 2008 Download PDF
The Sexual Liberals and the Attack on Feminism Edited by Dorchen Leidholdt and Janice G. Raymond. 1990 Download Full PDF (5MB)
Liberalism and the Death of Feminism, Catharine A. MacKinnon (PDF)
Sexology and Antifeminism, Sheila Jeffreys (PDF)
Woman-Hating Right and Left, Andrea Dworkin (PDF)
Taking Our Eyes Off the Guys, Sonia Johnson (PDF)
Family Matters, Ann Jones (PDF)
Confronting the Liberal Lies About Prostitution, Evelina Giobbe (PDF)
The New Reproductive Technologies, Gena Corea (PDF)
Mothers on Trial: Custody and the “Baby M” Case, Phyllis Chesler (PDF)
Sexual and Reproductive Liberalism, Janice G. Raymond (PDF)
In the Best Interest of the Sperm: The Pregnancy of Judge Sorkow, Pauline B. Bart (PDF)
Abortion and Pornography: The Sexual Liberals’ “Gotcha” Against Women’s Equality, Twiss Butler (PDF)
When Women Defend Pornography, Dorchen Leidholdt (PDF)
Eroticizing Women’s Subordination, Sheila Jeffreys (PDF)
Resistance, Andrea Dworkin (PDF)
Sex Resistance in Heterosexual Arrangements, A Southern Women’s Writing Collective (PDF)
Toward a Feminist Praxis of Sexuality, Wendy Stock (PDF)
Sexual Liberalism and Survivors of Sexual Abuse, Valerie Heller (PDF)
The Many Faces of Backlash, Florence Rush (PDF)
Liberals, Libertarianism, and the Liberal Arts Establishment, Susanne Kappeler (PDF)
You Can’t Fight Homophobia and Protect the Pornographers at the Same Time—An Analysis of What Went Wrong in Hardwick, John Stoltenberg (PDF)
A View from Another Country, Susan G. Cole (PDF)
Women and Civil Liberties, Kathleen A. Lahey (PDF)
Be-Witching: Re-Calling the Archimagical Powers of Women, Mary Daly (PDF)
Not a Sentimental Journey: Women’s Friendships, Janice G. Raymond (PDF)
Femicide Fetishize female vulnerability Handmaidens of the patriarchy Harm reduction/refusal to name the agent Joke’s on women Male bonding over misogyny Male entitlement Mansplaining/women’s perspective is wrong Necrophilia Normalize abuse/neglect Normalize porn/prostitution PIV-centric narrative — Goal is to “land a man” — Normalize exaggerated/simulated female pleasure — Normalize reproductive stress and pain — Pathologize menstruation — Pathologize older women and menopause/fetishize female youth — Rape and rape culture Pornify girl children/infantilize adult women Primacy of the nuclear family Reversal Support patriarchal institutions (medicine/religion/law) Woman as “useful object”
Crimes Against Women: The Proceedings of the International Tribunal
On the feminist analysis of beauty standards and oppressive femininity: Beauty & Misogyny, by Sheila Jeffreys
On the feminist analysis of queer theory:
Gender Hurts, by Sheila Jeffreys
Unpacking Queer Politics Download PDF,
LibFem vs. RadFem views on Gender
On the feminist analysis of the sex industrial complex:
The Industrial Vagina Download PDF,
Big Porn Inc: Exposing the Harms of the Global Pornography Industry. (Anthology),
Accounting for Pornography, Prostitution, and Patriarchy. by Pala Molisa, PhD student,
Women, Lesbians, and Prostitution: A Workingclass Dyke Speaks Out Against Buying Women for Sex, by Toby Summer, in Lesbian Culture: An Anthology, Julia Penelope and Susan Wolfe, eds
Not for Sale: Feminists Resisting Prostitution and Pornography, Christine Stark and Rebecca Whisnant, eds.
Sex critical & Kink critical text:
Against Sadomasochism (Anthology)
Ten Lies About Sadomasochism, by Melissa Farley
Unleashing Feminism: Critiquing Lesbian Sadomasochism in the Gay Nineties, by Irene Reti, ed.
How Orgasm Politics Has Hijacked the Women’s Movement, by Sheila Jeffreys
Intercourse, by Andrea Dworkin
Theological feminist criticism:
Beyond God The Father, by Mary Daly (1974)
Gyn/Ecology: The Metaethics of Radical Feminism, Mary Daly
The Gods and Goddesses of Old Europe, Marija Gimbutas
Woman, Church and State, Matilda Joslyn Gage
The Women’s Bible, Elizabeth Cady Stanton
Pure Lust, Mary Daly
On the feminist criticism of sexual liberalism:
“The Sexual Liberals and the Attack on Feminism” Anthology, (1987, edited 1990), http://radfem.org/the-sexual-liberals/
Incest: The Great Incest War: Introduction to The Secret Trauma
Making an Issue of Incest, Louise Armstrong (PDF)
Activism:
Lone Radical Feminist Actions
Best Strategies to Advance the Global Struggle Against Femicide
Feminists Threaten Larry Flynt: My Personal Contribution
Bin the Bunny. This is an anti-pornography campaign from London. It began in response the opening of a Playboy shop in 2007.
Object. A UK group committed to challenging the objectification of women.
No Porn Northampton. This site, based in USA, contains information about campaigns and many papers and resources relating to pornography.
Routes Out. This is a Glasgow based organisation founded to help women exit prostitution.
Turn Off the Red Light An Irish organisation working for an end to prostitution and sex trafficking in Ireland. It advocates the adoption of the Nordic Model.
Feminist Coalition Against Prostitution A UK coalition who believe that prostitution is male violence against women and are working to achieve Swedish style legislation. The site contains many useful links and resources.
Abolicion de la Prostitucion. This web site, in Spanish, was set up by a group of 77 women’s organisations to fight prostitution in that country.
Centre for Women’s Human Rights. This Korean feminist organistion was established in 2005.
The Polaris Project. Anti Trafficking organisation with a focus in Japan and USA
Websites with other resources (video clips, documentaries, quotes, articles, essays, interviews, graphics, etc): http://www.antipornography.org http://www.stoppatriarchy.org/ https://radicalhubarchives.wordpress.com/radfem-101/ http://www.feminist-reprise.org/fembib.html
I believe you but you should really include your sources.
men constitute 99.7% of strangulation attacks
men constitute 99.6% of acid attacks
men constitute 99.3% of child pornography
men constitute 99% mass shootings
men constitute 99% of rapist
men constitute 98% of homicide
men constitute 98% of forcible incest
men constitute 96% of child sex abuse
men constitute 95% of molesting cases
men constitute 99% of domestic abuse
men constitute 99% of drugging
men constitute 99% of stalking
men constitute 99% of human trafficking abuse
men constitute 99% of sex trafficking abuse
Men constitute 99% of animal abuse
Men constitute 98% of bestiality
86% of makeup companies are male 99% of advertising male 98% of modeling agencies 92% of fashion media is male 94% of the fashion industry is male
Women are 10x more likely to get raped, yet this is seriously underreported considering the dead bodies
1/3 of women internationally report being sexually assaulted. we know this number to be much higher due to autopsies reported in the census
Women are 400,000,000x more likely to DIE from RAPE
not one man has ever died from rape, accounts for no coroner report ever, whereas tens of thousands of women and children die a year.
50 million women are sex trafficking victims
women make up for 95% of labor trafficking
70% of child soldiers are FEMALE
25 million are forced into child marriages > 5
650 million are in arranged marriages/ marriages consummated below the age of consent
Men make up most 98% on average of every fetish community
99% for pedophilia.
in 70 countries - that comprise 26% of the world population, women need men's permission to learn, work, or travel.
There are 50 countries in which the law states you can sell and buy women into marriage. - These countries, including India and Pakistan, make up 38% of the entire world.
There are 178 countries that do not have the same legal rights for women, where written law specifically excludes women from freedom.
There are 2.4 billion women globally who are born in countries that have written law that restricts them completely, but even more so without a man.
6 billion people believe in a religion that states that women are less human than men
Did you know that after they switched to blind auditions, major symphony orchestras hired women between 30% to 55% more? Before bringing in “blind auditions” with a screen to conceal the the candidate, women in the top 5 major orchestras made up less than 5% of the musicians performing.
Exhibit 3106