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Women's Rights In The 1960s

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The Women’s Rights Movement was a time of hardship and people were willing to risk everything to support their cause. The 1960s was not a fair time for women. The women during this time would not stop until they were heard for one of the largest causes during this time, the women’s rights. The Women’s Rights Movement helped mold society by standing up for equality, making this have influence on our lifestyle today. During this time, the women were denied higher quality jobs and pay. It was unequal and unfair. This was all taking place during the 1960s. Women decided to protest to stand up for what they were entitled to. They stood up for their well deserved rights and did not stop until they had those rights. “Females across the nation started …show more content…

They saw men as being of a higher class than women. They lowered pay for women and raised this for men. For women, they could not invest anything by themselves. Men would have to cosign, or women just could not do that because of their gender or race. “[Women could not] get a credit card… serve in a jury… go on birth control pills… get an ivy league education… [or] experience equality in a workplace” (McLaughlin). Women could not choose to do these options because men would own their own credit cards. They refused to issue unmarried women a credit card, and if you were married, your husband would sign off on you owning it. If you got divorced, the husband would take the credit card, even though if it was the women, the man still cosigned making it his also. There were many more activities that women could not participate in, but these were the most common to see and most fought for. Women also had to pay taxes but had no representation in the levying of these taxes. Women had so many restrictions, or barriers they had to pass, they became almost dependant on a husband for …show more content…

The women thought they could be able to do the same activities that men could do. They protested until they got what they wanted and they would not back down. “The laws were unfair. [the women] decided to fight for what was right” (The 1960s-70s American Feminist Movement: Breaking Down Barriers for Women). The women were relentless and did not back down for what was the right thing to do. The president during this time was John Fitzgerald Kennedy. He was the one in office and since he decided not to listen to these peaceful protests, the women started more. They started groups and started to become ruthless. Some protested everyday until they received what they wanted in return, the rights that men also had. Instead of the government listening, they started to pass rights after they recognized what was going on. Sooner or later, women were equal with men in many different ways such as job pay, which was one of the immense problems going on during that time. When the women decided to speak up, they fought down a long, hard road, but they succeeded because they worked together and never backed

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