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Rebecca Solnit

  • Jocelyn Alfaro Ramirezhar citeretfor 19 dage siden
    Men explain things to me, and other women, whether or not they know what they’re talking about. Some men.
  • Jocelyn Alfaro Ramirezhar citeretfor 19 dage siden
    It’s the presumption that makes it hard, at times, for any woman in any field; that keeps women from speaking up and from being heard when they dare; that crushes young women into silence by indicating, the way harassment on the street does, that this is not their world. It trains us in self-doubt and self-limitation just as it exercises men’s unsupported overconfidence.
  • Jocelyn Alfaro Ramirezhar citeretfor 19 dage siden
    I’ve learned that a certain amount of self-doubt is a good tool for correcting, understanding, listening, and progressing—though too much is paralyzing and total self-confidence produces arrogant idiots.
  • Jocelyn Alfaro Ramirezhar citeretfor 19 dage siden
    Even getting a restraining order—a fairly new legal tool—requires acquiring the credibility to convince the courts that some guy is a menace and then getting the cops to enforce it. Restraining orders often don’t work anyway. Violence is one way to silence people, to deny their voice and their credibility, to assert your right to control over their right to exist.
  • Jocelyn Alfaro Ramirezhar citeretfor 19 dage siden
    Being told that, categorically, he knows what he’s talking about and she doesn’t, however minor a part of any given conversation, perpetuates the ugliness of this world and holds back its light.
  • Jocelyn Alfaro Ramirezhar citeretfor 19 dage siden
    The battle for women to be treated like human beings with rights to life, liberty, and the pursuit of involvement in cultural and political arenas continues, and it is sometimes a pretty grim battle.
  • Jocelyn Alfaro Ramirezhar citeretfor 18 dage siden
    We have an abundance of rape and violence against women in this country and on this Earth, though it’s almost never treated as a civil rights or human rights issue, or a crisis, or even a pattern. Violence doesn’t have a race, a class, a religion, or a nationality, but it does have a gender.
  • Jocelyn Alfaro Ramirezhar citeretfor 16 dage siden
    The pandemic of violence always gets explained as anything but gender, anything but what would seem to be the broadest explanatory pattern of all.
  • Jocelyn Alfaro Ramirezhar citeretfor 13 dage siden
    “The rights of man” was one of the great phrases of the French Revolution, but it’s always been questionable whether it included the rights of women.
  • Jocelyn Alfaro Ramirezhar citeretfor 13 dage siden
    Still, that a friend of mine got groped on her way back from a march about justice makes it clear how much there still is to be done.
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