![]() ![]() One may argue that if the word does not apply to you, then it must not be your problem, but that's not my problem. The term "feminist" has actually come under some criticism for its gendered language, leading some to adopt the term "pro-feminist" to keep in line with their not-female identity. If you mock these fine people, then you're racist. Hey! Do you have what it takes to be a feminist? Just remember that this is no laughing matter, and a serious issue. As a woman respecter, I find this respectable. ![]() This problem in the feminist community is second only to not respecting women. Hey, men! Did you know that women can have first world problems too? It's not just a man thing.ĭid you know? Disrespecting gender binaries is the fault of all the world's problems? I'm an intellectual. Just make sure everyone agrees on what you say before you say it. Here you can discuss anything you would like with your comrades. ![]() What do you do when you're not playing dress-up and LARPing around with cardboard signs? Like any good game of tag, when you're tired of running around, you call safe and wait for your opponent out. Of course, if there were only a few guys protesting, how would anyone be able to hear a specific and concise voice? You have to go to more of these because if there are more people and more different kinds of people then the protest will be more effective. This article gives some tips such as "go to more of them" and that's it. I wonder how these citizens could be a better band of protesters. What the hell are they protesting this time? Who knows? I'll never know because nothing ever gets done in this country. I know this because there's a protest every week. Protesting is America's favourite pastime. Just read the ones that make you go, "what the hell?"Įveryday Feminism's bread and butter. There are a lot of links here, so don't feel like you have to read all of them. For this reason, I took a sample of authors hired by the site, and grouped their webcomics into topics so you can get an idea of what positions the site actually holds. Most of the webcomics are taken from other sources and used to illustrate a point made by the site. Most of the webcomics at Everyday Feminism don't belong to Everyday Feminism itself. They still take work from other artists, sometimes with permission, and while some of the republished strips are some of the more amusing or even high hanging fruit, I'm only going to focus on the ones commissioned by the site itself. So they created the comics section and hired some artists and writers to make their own edutainment strips. The success of this comic's exposure led to the site deciding to put out political cartoons of similar stature. This is their most shared article on the website to this day. Their first webcomic was a republish of an open-source strip titled "White Privilege, Explained in One Simple Comic" which lectures the reader on how white people are at fault for all the world's problems, and that these problems must be reconciled only by the hands of white people. The downfall wasn't a point in time in which the webcomic took a dip in quality, but the decision to form a "comics" section of their website to begin with. I don't think that the editors at Everyday Feminism know what a webcomic is because some of the things listed under "comics" are actually powerpoints. However, this online tabloid has made full use of its medium by including a comics section. I know what you're thinking, and you're probably thinking, "That doesn't sound like a webcomic at all! That just sounds like a tabloid," and you would be right. It is the philosophical equivalent of a snake that eats its own tail. They plan to reach this goal by explaining these situations through the lens of, as they put it, intersectional feminism, which is a feminist thought which entails that all issues at their root are feminist issues and require feminism as a solution for these problems. They put out articles every day entailing the struggles of the less common man woman in the Western world. Everyday Feminism launched in June 2012 as an educational platform for social and personal liberation. ![]()
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