Elizabeth Cady Stanton, an American suffragist, social activist, abolitionist, and leading figure of the early women's rights movement, said, “Thus far, women have been the mere echoes of men. Our laws and constitutions, our creeds and codes, and the customs of social life are all of masculine origin. The true woman is as yet a dream of the future.” America treats women as if they were second-class citizens. Knowing that women have most certainly earned the right to acquire the same opportunities and attain the same accomplishments as men, Stanton said this in order to stipulate for a sexist-free and misogynist-free future; however, her stipulation remained unmet.
Unpolished and dastardly, America’s history with women lacks preeminence,
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Until 1973, women lacked control of their own bodies and pregnancies. In 1923, the Supreme Court ruled that setting a minimum wage for women was unconstitutional. In 1965, women gained the right to use contraceptives if they so chose to. In 1971, an Illinois law stating that men were to be preferable over women deemed unconstitutional. In 1937, the government banned jobs that required one gender over another. In 1996, women seized the right to join the military. Furthermore, from these examples, a myriad of changes materialized in order to diminish some of the sexist laws and regulations that the United States once held. However, even though these laws and regulations are now unconstitutional and banned, sexism is still alive and well in America. On account of the new Administration, the laws and regulations that the government made unconstitutional are coming back to life. In regards to the nation’s history, historians and politicians could cite a glut amount of examples of sexism in America. Additionally, many examples can bespeak sexism in today’s society in America. For instance, men are circumventing sexual abuse day after day, high schools enforce a dress code on female students in order to hinder distraction of the male students; this sends the message that a man’s education is more imperative than a woman’s education, and the anti-abortion and anti-contraceptive laws make yet another appearance with the President’s new