Just So We’re Clear, #MeToo Was Started By A Black Woman + The Stories Women Have Shared
“It’s beyond a hashtag. It’s the start of a larger conversation and a movement for radical community healing.”
“It’s beyond a hashtag. It’s the start of a larger conversation and a movement for radical community healing.”
In case it really does require more explanation…
This is crucial reading material on something very few people know how to do.
Imagine how different things would be if we believed those who know their own oppression.
No. No. No. Say it loud so you never have to defend that you never learned how.
“Protestors are marching against ‘the propagation of state-violence and the widespread incarceration of Black women and girls, rape and all sexualized violence, the murders and brutalization of trans women and the disappearances of our girls from our streets, our schools …
If we are committed to addressing threats of violence to the people in our country, we need to be addressing the deadly violence of white men.
Those leading Silicon Valley’s gender equality push said they were astonished that just as the movement was having an impact, it opened up an even more radical men’s rights perspective.
Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie writes about her struggle with depression, her denial, as well as acceptance of an illness that is common among creative people.
“In every single place, girls are given the message that they are weak, that they are vulnerable. That their bodies are a target.”