A Statue of a Defiant Girl Now Confronts the Famous ‘Charging Bull’ on Wall St.
wow, great
$LAYYYTER
ojovivo

Kaledo Art

Andulka
Aqua Utopia|海の底で記憶を紡ぐ
Peter Solarz
taylor price
tumblr dot com
will byers stan first human second
RMH
One Nice Bug Per Day
Cosmic Funnies
let's talk about Bridgerton tea, my ask is open

No title available

roma★
todays bird
sheepfilms
trying on a metaphor
NASA
🪼

seen from United Kingdom

seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from Brazil
seen from United Kingdom
seen from Belgium

seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from Singapore

seen from Latvia
seen from Germany

seen from France
seen from United States

seen from Japan

seen from Malaysia

seen from Sri Lanka
seen from United States
seen from Brazil

seen from Germany

seen from United Kingdom
@hcwc
A Statue of a Defiant Girl Now Confronts the Famous ‘Charging Bull’ on Wall St.
wow, great
Today is International Women’s Day, and Planned Parenthood is proud to celebrate all women who embody the spirit of resistance, leadership, and strength. Reblog and tag a woman who refuses to be ashamed of who she is — and who you can’t go a day without.
Iceland just became the first country to make the gender pay gap illegal
Iceland just made history by becoming the first country in the world to require companies to prove they pay their employees equally regardless of gender. Fittingly, the Icelandic government announced the new legislation on International Women’s Day.
According to the Associated Press, the Icelandic government will introduce legislation to Parliament later this month that will require any business with more than 25 employees to obtain a certificate confirming that they pay all employees equally for equal work.
Similar certificate programs exist in other countries and in one U.S. state, Minnesota. But Iceland will reportedly be the first country to mandate a certificate for both public and private companies. Read more (3/9/17 11:52 AM
7 Inspiring Women from Asia You May Not Know
03/08/17
1. Ayesha Farooq (Pakistan)
Ayesha Farooq was born on August 24, 1987 in the city of Bahawalpur. Today, she is Pakistan’s only female fighter pilot. A remarkable achievement, Flight Lieutenant Ayesha Farooq is the first of six female fighter pilots to pass the final exams to qualify for battle. Her childhood was the biggest factor in her becoming a fighter pilot. There had never been any doubt that she would one day pilot a jet, she says.
2. Pasang Lhamu Sherpa (Nepal)
The first Nepali woman mountineer to scale the highest peak of the world in April, 1993, was Pasang Lhamu Sherpa. Born on 10th December 1961 in Sukre, Sherpa was an example of courageous and determinant Nepali woman.
Picture source
3. Chiaki Mukai (Japan)
Praised and loved both by the Japanese government and people, Chiaki Mukai has blazed new trails into a field previously unheard of for women. She has become an incredible success in her field as Japan’s first female astronaut, and yet another source of pride for Japanese people worldwide.
Picture source
4. Mia Sutanto (Indonesia)
While it may seem commonsense to breastfeed babies, many Indonesian mothers have for years been encouraged not to do it, instead being asked to feed their babies with formula. Fighting this misconception has become Mia Sutanto’s personal battle, as the chairwoman and co-founder of the Indonesian Breastfeeding Mothers’ Association (AIMI), the largest organization in the country promoting breastfeeding, with chapters in 15 provinces (roughly half of all provinces).
5. Leila Khaled (Palestine)
When Palestinian liberation fighter Leila Khaled hijacked her first plane in 1969, she became the international pin-up of armed struggle. Then she underwent cosmetic surgery so she could do it again.
Picture source
6. Asipa Musaeva (Kyrgyzstan)
In 1996, Asipa founded the Republican Independent Association of Women with Disabilities of Kyrgyzstan. One of the group’s biggest projects was to push for a local law that would make public spaces accessible for people with disabilities.
7. Maria Lorena Barros (Philippines)
Maria Lorena Barros remains today one of the most well-known heroes of the antidictatorship struggle: a charismatic leader, gifted writer, icon of modern Philippine feminism, the “gentle warrior” who defiantly confronted death at the hands of government soldiers, deep in the forests of the Sierra Madre.
Picture Source
Serena Williams now officially has the most major tennis wins of anyone, ever
Serena Williams set a record for Grand Slam wins with her 308th, passing Roger Federer for most all-time. Her fourth round victory over Yaroslava Shvedova came 6-2, 6-3 on Monday at the U.S. Open. And this is how insanely decorated she’ll be if she wins the Open.
Gifs: HD Tennis (1) (2)
Everything to know about the women’s strikes on International Women’s Day
International Women’s Day is on Wednesday, March 8, and worldwide, women are celebrating by doing absolutely nothing.
Strikes highlighting gender inequality and labor reform have been called across the country and around the globe, along with smaller protests and actions, all under the dual umbrellas of International Women’s Strike and A Day Without a Woman.
International Women’s Day is a global celebration of women’s achievements that’s been around since 1908.
Women have been striking on International Women’s Day since 1917, Ashley Bohrer, a co-organizer for International Women’s Strike U.S., said in a phone interview.
The Women’s March on Washington organizers announced A Day Without a Woman in early February, on the heels of their national demonstration for human rights on Jan. 21, 2017.
A Day Without a Woman rests on the intersectional feminism espoused by the Women’s March on Washington.
The strike, however, is slightly different: Women are asked to refrain from doing any kind of labor — paid or unpaid, physical or emotional.
Alternatively or in addition, people can show solidarity with striking women by wearing red and refusing to shop, unless they do so at women-owned or small, local businesses. Read more (3/8/17 6:09 AM)
Can’t miss a day of work? Here’s how you can still participate in the women’s strike.
Many folks just can’t afford to risk losing their jobs or to give up a day’s wages. Thankfully, there are ways to participate without staying away from work or school.
If possible, avoid spending any money
The organizers of A Day Without a Woman acknowledge that not everyone can take part in the same way. One of the ways they suggest participating is to avoid shopping at stores or online for the duration of the day, with the exception of “small, women-owned and minority-owned businesses that support us.”
If you can avoid it, don’t do any housework either
Organizers of the International Women’s Strike suggest strike participants should “leave care and housework for the day,” if they can.
Research has shown that, in straight couples, women are overwhelmingly expected to do stereotypical duties like childcare, cooking and laundry.
Wear red
Organizers of a Day Without a Woman and the U.S. branch of the International Women’s Strike are also asking people to participate in the day by wearing red, if they can.
Red was chosen as the day’s official color because, according to A Day Without a Woman organizers, it symbolizes “revolutionary love and sacrifice” and “is the color of energy and action associated with our will to survive.”
Give a caregiver the day off
If you or your household employ any women as a caregiver, nanny, babysitter or housekeeper, give them Wednesday off.
Are you a male ally? Act like one
A Day Without a Woman organizers also provided a handy list of ways male allies can step up their game on Wednesday (or any day, really). Read more (3/8/17 6:11 AM)
international women’s day is today!!
Katherine Johnson: NASA ‘Hidden Computer’
Katherine Coleman Goble Johnson is an Black American physicist, space scientist, and mathematician who contributed to America’s aeronautics and space programs with the early application of digital electronic computers during a time when NASA was still racially segregated. The Black women who were a part of this team Katherine was in were known to be called the ‘Hidden Computers’, due to their vital calculations that helped NASA send humans to the moon and back safely but having treated the women differently and in many ways hidden away as they saved lives.
Brave Black Woman Stands Alone Against Hundreds Of Neo-Nazis
I know I keep re blogging this and I will continue to whenever I see it.
We are magnificent
“It was an impulse. I was so angry, I just went out into the street,” Asplund told the Guardian. “I was thinking: ‘hell no, they can’t march here!’ I had this adrenaline. No Nazi is going to march here, it’s not okay.”
The paper reported that Asplund stands just 5’2” and weighs about 110 pounds — yet she stood in the path of some 300 marching neo-Nazis, one of whom shoved her out of the way.
@ouchwinwin
February is Teen Dating Violence Awareness Month. Remember, everyone deserves a healthy relationship! #teendvmonth http://thndr.me/T7zX0E
Watch: This is what women and girls are hearing. Boys and men are hearing something else.
follow @this-is-life-actually
it is NEVER the survivor’s fault.
every woman on tumblr should have this on their dash
And every man
Look how nobody’s yelling or arguing or making things into a competition. Look how this is to straight up educate people through a different perspective. Look how effective that makes the message.
The last one really hit me. I never really thought about something like that could actually impact a woman’s life. Damn…
Words to live by.
What’s her name
Her name is Theresa Kachindamoto and here’s the article x
When you drop a truth bomb on a sexist discussion board and sit back to watch the damage unfold
When someone’s rude to your girlfriends