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Persuasive Essay On Women's Rights

1537 Words7 Pages

In recent news, Hilary Clinton will soon be announcing that she will be a candidate for the presidency in 2016. This will be a huge step for women’s rights as we come one step closer to having a female president. With this announcement, it seems that women don’t face the unfair treatment they receive when it comes to politics. However, the fact is women still suffer discrimination through workplaces and stereotypes because women are not typically perceived as one individual, like a man is in the U.S. Furthermore in current news, the state of Indiana has announced the passage for the Religious Freedom Bill. The bill was designed to protect the beliefs of religious minorities. This law, however, protects a business from refusing service to …show more content…

The modern women’s liberation movement commenced in 1960’s as a reaction to the inequalities they faced such as social parity, equal pay for equal work, and to be one with the sexes. Their victory in gaining women’s suffrage in the 1920’s was the first step of gaining equality in America. Although, this victory is important, it was not enough to end the fight for liberation. Political intervention did not do enough to bring about the social standing of women. These constant inequalities that women faced along with other social trends sparked the modern women’s movement also know as feminism. Author Betty Friedan was the first to make a public outbreak on the movement. She challenged these attitudes towards women with her book “The Feminine Mystique”. By opening the eyes of many women, feminist decided to move on the next victory. They began to pressure the US government for the passage of Equal Pay Act in 1963. This made it illegal to pay women less for equal work. With just a book released and few women knowing about this movement Betty Friedan and other feminist created the National Organization of Women in 1966. This organization marked the beginning of the modern liberation and that will later make a very big difference in the movement it quickly became the most influential and only women’s rights group in the United States. “The feminists had destroyed the old image of a woman, but they could not erase the hostility, the prejudice, the discrimination that still remained” (Freidan). The root of the discrimination against the women in America is the embedded stereotypes. Men in America are constructed to see women as the fragile and sexually appealing, instead of being viewed as equal individuals with men. A way woman decided to demonstrate their rage towards these perceptions of women, they decided to protest. The Miss America Protest (also known as the Bra Burning protest) was a

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