Top 1200 Radical Feminist Quotes & Sayings - Page 10

Explore popular Radical Feminist quotes.
Last updated on December 24, 2024.
I did not start out thinking I'm going to become a feminist poet. It was a tag I was given.
Radical Islam, it has grown into a global jihad.
Loving your enemy is a radical concept. — © Tavis Smiley
Loving your enemy is a radical concept.
We need a feminist movement in which the facts of the case trump the identities of the parties involved.
A.J. [Muste] was a - as he likes to say, a radical pacifist.
Conservatives believe that we need to defeat radical Islam not because we want war but because ISIS and other radical Islamist are enemies of peace and that's why we need a president, who in which under whom the best intelligence agencies in the world will find terrorists and the best military in the world will destroy them. And if we capture them alive, a president that will bring them to the United States. A president that will grant them a court-appointed lawyer, a president that will send these terrorists where they belong, to Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.
I took a page from [the playwright] Wendy Wasserstein's book. She said 'I'm not a feminist, I'm a humanist.'
The depressed person is a radical, sullen atheist.
I certainly wouldn't be writing books if it hadn't been for the feminist blogosphere, and I think that's a really amazing thing.
One of the biggest problems with the modern feminist movement is its failure to bring men along with us.
My idea of a true feminist is a woman who feels free enough to do whatever she wants.
I think Dilbert is actually a radical strip.
If you're fighting to limit other women's rights, then you can't really call yourself a feminist. — © Jessica Valenti
If you're fighting to limit other women's rights, then you can't really call yourself a feminist.
A movie about a weak, vulnerable woman can be feminist if it shows a real person that we can empathize with.
I have never been ashamed of calling myself a feminist, and I believe passionately in women's rights.
That became the Netflix culture: radical honesty.
One day I look forward to making dinner for my husband and children. I don't want to be a career feminist.
I'm a massive feminist, but I think it's a little unfair on the other sex saying they're not in it to change the world.
I'm not one of those radical believers that everybody has to be forced to do one thing.
It's not radical Islam that worries the US -- it's independence
Maybe there's something about the outsiderness of being Jewish that makes for a fiery feminist type.
Love-making is radical, while marriage is conservative.
I believe that Reagan's a radical on arms control.
It is a radical act to believe in and like yourself.
Empathy is the most radical of human emotions.
We are in a struggle against radical Islamic terrorism, al-Qaida and ISIS. The president, in his campaign for office, made it clear that he would make a priority of confronting radical Islamic terrorism abroad. But also adding new measures to ensure that individuals would not be coming into this country with the motivation to harm our people. And we really do believe that this temporary pause with regard to the countries other than Syria, temporary pause where we evaluate our screening process and ensure that people coming into the country don't represent a threat is appropriate.
Well, I think I’m a feminist, just by the virtue of the fact that I believe in equal rights for everyone.
We're not radical when we are speaking about fewer immigrants.
I think the most radical thing you can do is be yourself.
For me, 'revolution' simply means radical change.
Thinking for yourself is still a radical act
The radical elements in Islam are very dangerous.
I think it was really entering my 30s that I began to embrace feminism and call myself a feminist.
I tend not to believe radical Muslim movements.
What I do isn't radical. It's just distinct in small ways.
The most radical act anyone can commit is to be happy.
I'm a proud feminist, people get irritated with that word... but we need feminism in our country.
Women need to be treated equally as men, but there are issues with the term feminist and people balk at that. — © Sara Cox
Women need to be treated equally as men, but there are issues with the term feminist and people balk at that.
I really connect to strong feminist writers that make their ideas accessible for the rest of the world.
I've never considered myself a feminist, but I'm happy that I've been raised as a strong, independent woman.
If I had to characterize one quality as the genius of feminist thought, culture, and action, it would be the connectivity.
Whenever you want a radical shift, it rarely happens.
There's always the danger that the extreme feminist will end up quite unfulfilled as a girl.
I'm more into Neil Young and radical honesty.
Radical conservatives want to police bedrooms.
I'm not a communist, a socialist or a radical. But these issues have to be addressed.
I would much rather be the obnoxious feminist girl than be complicit in my own dehumanization.
For many people - from secular feminists to observant Jews - the notion of a feminist Judaism is an oxymoron. — © Judith Plaskow
For many people - from secular feminists to observant Jews - the notion of a feminist Judaism is an oxymoron.
My husband is a fall-away Catholic, but with a vengeance. He's actually more of a feminist than I am.
I have had the advantage of a radical Christian upbringing
Any woman whose I.Q. hovers above her body temperature must be a feminist.
I feel like there's this weird thing that as a feminist band you get put in this role as ambassadors.
I’m very feminist in the way I look at the world, and that worldview must somehow be part of my work.
Radical politics tend to be simple minded.
No matter how many feminist tracts you read, you never forget what boys like.
I never played a part in the feminist movement - it touches me, but I am not a militant.
When I went to school, it was radical just to be involved in anything.
I think we all remember Emma Peel from 'The Avengers,' the feminist icon that she was in the late '60s.
Freedom is still the most radical idea of all.
I wouldn't really call myself a feminist. I obviously want equality and equal opportunities to the men.
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