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Gender Issues Quotes

Quotes tagged as "gender-issues" Showing 1-14 of 14
Louise Carey
“Once there was a city of women.”
Louise Carey, The Steel Seraglio

Miya Yamanouchi
“Both men and women experience pressure to conform to social standards of attractiveness. Men to look strong and be tough, women to look pretty and soft. Men to be masculine, women to be feminine. Men get judged for being "too feminine", women get criticized for being "too masculine". Gender policing affects us all.”
Miya Yamanouchi , Embrace Your Sexual Self: A Practical Guide for Women

Adam Leonas
“A weaker sex drive is at the basis of female superiority.”
Adam Leonas, The Empress Is Naked: From Female Privilege to Gender Equality and Social Liberation

Steven Magee
“Biology creates males and females. Pollution creates gender issues in them.”
Steven Magee

Steven Magee
“What are the results of a polluted planet Earth? Historic severe storms resulting in record breaking flooding, rising sea levels with ocean water so hot it is killing off the life within it, the hottest surface temperatures ever recorded, forests fires so large they pollute for thousands of miles, extreme seasons that cause landslides, dams that are rapidly going empty, and the rise of autism and gender issues followed by a global pandemic are all good examples of a polluted planet Earth.”
Steven Magee

Steven Magee
“For many gays, it is not such a rosy rainbow.”
Steven Magee

Mitta Xinindlu
“Women are always under attack; and the majority of those women are in lala land, snoring, ”
Mitta Xinindlu

Mitta Xinindlu
“Women are always under attack; and the majority of those women are in lala land, snoring,... On the contrary, the boys are working overtime, making sure that they're winning the race no matter what, even if they have to disguise themselves as females.

It's always been a power struggle, and putting the female gender as second in importance. And the boys finally found a clever strategy to advance their gender while having females cheer for them from the sidelinWho promotes female impersonation the most? Female celebrities. Who protects the rights of female impersonators the most? Female politicians and leaders.

The boys hired the best empowered females in the world to vouch for them. They got them to fight ...not for other females but for the boys disguised as females. Now, that's chess.”
Mitta Xinindlu

Mitta Xinindlu
“Women are always under attack; and the majority of those women are in lala land, snoring,... On the contrary, the boys are working overtime, making sure that they're winning the race no matter what, even if they have to disguise themselves as females.

It's always been a power struggle, and putting the female gender as second in importance. And the boys finally found a clever strategy to advance their gender while having females cheer for them from the sidelines.

Who promotes female impersonation the most? Female celebrities. Who protects the rights of female impersonators the most? Female politicians and leaders.

The boys hired the best empowered females in the world to vouch for them. They got them to fight ...not for other females but for the boys disguised as females. Now, that's chess.”
Mitta Xinindlu

Mitta Xinindlu
“Who promotes female impersonation the most? Female celebrities. Who protects the rights of female impersonators the most? Female politicians and leaders.

The boys hired the best empowered females in the world to vouch for them. They got them to fight ...not for other females but for the boys disguised as females. Now, that's chess.”
Mitta Xinindlu

Steven Magee
“Gender issues are an illness of the hormonal system.”
Steven Magee

Steven Magee
“I remember two boys being suspected of being gay in my class as a child in the 1970’s. Assuming there were also two girls that were gender challenged, that makes four people out of a class of thirty that had gender issues! In the 2020’s that number is believed to be around eight people. What has changed to cause this?”
Steven Magee

Scaachi Koul
“Being surveilled with the intention of assault or rape is practically mundane, it happens so often. It's such an ingrained part of the female experience that it doesn't register as unusual. The danger of it, then, is in its routine, in how normalized it is for a woman to feel monitored, so much so that she might not know she's in trouble until that invisible line is crossed from "typical patriarchy" to "you should run.”
Scaachi Koul, One Day We'll All Be Dead and None of This Will Matter

Scaachi Koul
“Women are so used to being watched that we don't notice when someone's watching us for the worst reason imaginable.”
Scaachi Koul, One Day We'll All Be Dead and None of This Will Matter

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