A Quote by Tiny Tim

I don't believe in Women's Liberation. No, no, no, no, no. Not at all. — © Tiny Tim
I don't believe in Women's Liberation. No, no, no, no, no. Not at all.
I believe that as women, we must commit ourselves to sustaining the progress made by our foremothers who fought so hard for women's equality and liberation.
The struggle for the aim of the liberation of women is the child of fire born on the lap of our liberation movement.
Women's liberation is the liberation of the feminine in the man and the masculine in the woman.
My wife's income allowed me to do what I really loved. I realized that women's liberation is men's liberation, too.
I realized that women's liberation is men's liberation, too.
The liberation of the earth, the liberation of women, the liberation of all humanity is the next step of freedom we need to work for, and it's the next step of peace that we need to create.
As with all forms of liberation, of which the liberation of women is only one example, it is easy to suppose in a time of freedom that the darker days of repression can never come again.
One absolutely crucial change is that feminist film theory is today an academic subject to be studied and taught. "Visual Pleasure and Narrative Cinema" was a political intervention, primarily influenced by the Women's Liberation Movement and, in my specific case, a Women's Liberation study group, in which we read Freud and realised the usefulness of psychoanalytic theory for a feminist project.
It is not women's liberation, it is women's and men's liberation.
I don't think that Women's Liberation will change much though -- not because there is anything wrong with their aims, but because it is already clear that the whole world is being shaken into a new pattern by the cataclysms we are living through: probably by the time we are through, if we do get through at all, the aims of Women's Liberation will look very small and quaint.
According to the classic liberal-arts ideal, learning promises liberation, but it is not liberation from demanding moral ideals and social norms, or liberation to act on our desires-it is, rather, liberation from slavery to those desires, from slavery to self.
Women's liberation and the male midlife crisis were the same search--for personal fulfillment, common values, mutual respect, love. But while women's liberation was thought of as promoting identity, the male midlife crisis was thought of as an identity crisis.
For myself, as, no doubt, for most of my contemporaries, the philosophy of meaninglessness was essentially an instrument of liberation. The liberation we desired was simultaneously liberation from a certain political and economic system and liberation from a certain system of morality. We objected to the morality because it interfered with our sexual freedom.
I am the best male ally I have ever heard of for women and women's liberation.
After 40, women forget they are women. There's a certain liberation and we get to know ourselves.
The message of women's liberation is that women can love each other and ourselves against our degrading education.
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