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Young Feminist

This is a feminism focused blog for teenage and child feminists. This blog will mainy focus on young feminism, anti child (or teen) discrimination, body positivity, and equal rights for all.
Nov 14 '12

Believing that all bodies are attractive does not mean you personally have to be attracted to all bodies.

radicallane:

queenofadodi:

pnkpanther65:

marysquattins:

It means that you believe that every body is capable of being found attractive by someone.

thank you

fucking. this. a lot of so-called “radical” folks on tumblr can learn from this. 

YES.

(Source: mary0squattins)

24,734 notes (via elfstaranymore & mary0squattins)

Nov 14 '12

Mission Statement

lesbianlegbreaker:

hidden-agender:

transclothesexchange:

The Tumblr Transgender Clothing Exchange aims to give the tumblr trans* community easier access to gender-affirming clothing through an open and free forum for them to sell, buy, trade, and give away clothing items to other members of tumblr.com  

(revised 11/11/12)

SIGNAL BOOST THIS!!!

SIGNAL BOOST SIGNAL BOOST SIGNAL BOOST!

405 notes (via lesbianlegbreaker & transclothesexchange)

Nov 8 '12

(Source: anna-grrrl)

24,150 notes (via gentlemansspongebag & anna-grrrl)

Nov 7 '12

fatttttyfatdancepants:

adventuresofcomicbookgirl:

Some of this is taken from other posts. Ladies makin’ history collage.

Mary Gonzalez is the Representative-elect for Texas and will be the first openly pansexual official in the United States. She acknowledged the existence of non-binary identities when she came out.

Mazie Hirono is the Senator Elect from Hawaii and will be the first Asian-American woman in the Senate.

Tammy Duckworth is the Representative-elect for Illinois. She lost both her legs in the Iraq War and will be the first disabled female veteran elected to the House.

Tammy Baldwin is the Senator Elect from Winsconsin and the first openly gay person ever elected to the Senate.

(There was some misinformation over her stance on transgender issues (admittedly, the whole incident was a bit fuzzy at the end) but to clear things up, she has publically spoken out against transgender discrimination and advocated for their rights as recently as last year.)

GET IT, GRRRRRRRRRRRL!

3,437 notes (via farcical-aquatic-ceremony & adventuresofcomicbookgirl)

Oct 22 '12
faded-as-my-jeans:

pynapel:

aboutmaleprivilege:

Male privilege is the sexualization of Breast Cancer awareness.

THIS
it reminds me of what Randall Munroe said:
“The frustrating thing about the “Save the Boobies” campaign and similar things (like the “Booberday” meme going around G+) is that they get it exactly backward. Often, the point of breast cancer treatment is to destroy some or all of the boobies in order to save the woman.
Saying that we should work to cure this disease because it threatens breasts is really upsetting. For starters, it suggests that women are worth saving because they’re attached to breasts, rather than the other way around. But worse, it tells any woman who’s had a mastectomy to try to save her life that she’s lost the thing that made people care about her survival. What a punch in the stomach.”

UGH this stuff pisses me off goddamn much. It’s hard to criticize because people get defensive since it’s “for a good cause”, but I just don’t see how sexualizing this helps anyone at all. 

faded-as-my-jeans:

pynapel:

aboutmaleprivilege:

Male privilege is the sexualization of Breast Cancer awareness.

THIS

it reminds me of what Randall Munroe said:

“The frustrating thing about the “Save the Boobies” campaign and similar things (like the “Booberday” meme going around G+) is that they get it exactly backward. Often, the point of breast cancer treatment is to destroy some or all of the boobies in order to save the woman.

Saying that we should work to cure this disease because it threatens breasts is really upsetting. For starters, it suggests that women are worth saving because they’re attached to breasts, rather than the other way around. But worse, it tells any woman who’s had a mastectomy to try to save her life that she’s lost the thing that made people care about her survival. What a punch in the stomach.”

UGH this stuff pisses me off goddamn much. It’s hard to criticize because people get defensive since it’s “for a good cause”, but I just don’t see how sexualizing this helps anyone at all. 

(Source: all-about-male-privilege)

28,928 notes (via asfadedasmyjeans & all-about-male-privilege)

Oct 20 '12

(Source: tasseoart)

14,218 notes (via lesbianlegbreaker & tasseoart)

Oct 14 '12

biconfessions:

itgetsbetteryk:

Some of our handy handouts designed to help people learn about queer issues and identities!

Educate yourself, and then educate the world!

46,300 notes (via radicallane & itgetsbetteryk)

Oct 14 '12

If you aren’t supporting trans women’s reproductive rights then you’re still a misogynist

snatching-fedoras:

Reproductive rights is not only about cis women having access to abortion and birth control.

It’s about trans women not being required to be sterilized in order to have legal gender recognition, too.

(Source: hollowpikeman)

6,118 notes (via radicallane & hollowpikeman)

Oct 14 '12
TW: Child abuse, assault

Children should remain silent, and they are ‘good’ when they’re quiet, but ‘bad’ when they are not, because they are disturbing the adults and causing trouble. This attitude runs through the way people interact with children on every level, and yet, they seem surprised when it turns out that children have been struggling with serious medical problems, or they’ve been assaulted or abused.

The most common response is ‘well why didn’t the child say something?’ or ‘why didn’t the child talk to an adult?’ Adults constantly assure themselves that children know to go to a grownup when they are in trouble, and they even repeat that sentiment to children; you can always come to us, adults tell children, when you need help. Find a trusted adult, a teacher or a doctor or a police officer or a firefighter, and tell that adult what’s going on, and you’ll be helped, and everything will be all right.

The thing is that children do that, and the adults don’t listen. Every time a child tells an adult about something and nothing happens, that child learns that adults are liars, and that they don’t provide the promised help. Children hold up their end of the deal by reporting, sometimes at great personal risk, and they get no concrete action in return. Sometimes, the very adult people tell a child to ‘trust’ is the least reliable person; the teacher is friends with the priest who is molesting a student, the firefighter plays pool with the father who is beating a child, they don’t want to cause a scene.

Or children are accused of lying for attention because they accused the wrong person. They’re told they must be mistaken about what happened, unclear on the specifics, because there’s no way what they’re saying could be true, so and so isn’t that kind of person. A mother would never do that. He’s a respected member of the community! In their haste to close their ears to the child’s voice, adults make sure the child’s experience is utterly denied and debunked. Couldn’t be, can’t be, won’t be. The child knows not to say such things in the future, because no one is listening, because people will actively tell the child to be quiet.

Children are also told that they aren’t experiencing what they’re actually experiencing, or they’re being fussy about nothing. A child reports a pain in her leg after gym class, and she’s told to quit whining. Four months later, everyone is shocked when her metastatic bone cancer becomes unavoidably apparent. Had someone listened to her in the first place when she reported the original bone pain and said it felt different that usual, she would have been evaluated sooner. A child tells a teacher he has trouble seeing the blackboard, and the teacher dismisses it, so the child is never referred for glasses; the child struggles with math until high school, when someone finally acknowledges there’s a problem.

This attitude, that children shouldn’t be believed, puts the burden of proof on children, rather than assuming that there might be something to their statements. Some people seem to think that actually listening to children would result in a generation of hopelessly spoiled brats who know they can say anything for attention, but would that actually be the case? That assumption is rooted in the idea that children are not trustworthy, and cannot be respected. I’m having trouble understanding why adults should be viewed as inherently trustworthy and respectable, especially in light of the way we treat children.

Children Talk But No One Listens – this ain’t livin’ (via unsungtale)

s.e.smith/meloukhia is a dear friend of mine, who is also made of everything that is amazing in the world.

People, read this and pay attention.

(via ouyangdan)

7,868 notes (via radicallane & unsungtale)

Oct 9 '12
If you choose not to participate in the trend of wearing risqué costumes, more power to you. However, I think it’s dangerous to develop a superior attitude toward other women who want to show some skin. In other words, do your thing, but respect other women who feel confident about their bodies. I recall on a Halloween a few years ago when a woman screamed “sluts!” out a car window as she drove past a group of scantily clad women. For the guys who witnessed that incident, it may have reinforced the acceptability of using those terms. If other women wearing those types of costumes really bothers you, it may be time to examine exactly why it gets on your nerves. Imagine if women complimented each other when they saw each other out in skimpy costumes, and defended each other against sexist, slut-shaming remarks? It would certainly make my Halloween a lot better if women viewed each other in solidarity.

8,722 notes (via farcical-aquatic-ceremony & stfusexists)