Women’s experiences with misogyny are often individualistic, but misogyny is also deeply systemic. If we don’t understand and address the systemic nature of it, then we are going to have a more difficult time dismantling it. @ZReflective https://t.co/GxBY8tgMKT
The common definition of misogyny—the hatred of women—makes it too easy for men to say, “I don’t hate women, therefore this conversation doesn't apply to me”. If we ever hope to eliminate misogyny, men have to engage. https://t.co/kmWobBqtIm
“God loves women. The ways that Jesus treated women demonstrated that. If systems, governments, work places, & churches, took seriously what it means to love women well, misogyny would fall.” https://t.co/HtvFdRXolp
Goods designed by men and based primarily on men’s bodies can inconvenience or even physically harm women.
The “male-unless-otherwise-indicated” theory of design shows up in many everyday products, forcing women to adapt and compensate. @DorothyGreco https://t.co/mjcfmKvEkq
@hereandnowrobin Hi Robin. Just wondering if you received the little gift bag with my book (For the Love of Women) that I dropped off at WBUR 2 weeks ago. Tnx.
Listen in on a conversation with author/activist Jonathan Walton as we discuss male entitlement, defensiveness, and how men might begin to see that the manosphere is a dead end. https://t.co/Dxb1MO6gyF