“And I also hope men start to understand one day, that women have been oppressed since the beginning of time. We are only just starting to find our voices and demand equality. Do not abuse our conditioning to bend to your whims. Especially in the bedroom.”— Jameela Jamil, jameelajamil.co.uk
“I think it’s fucked up that women get paid less than men but I will never not have a hard time advocating for millionaire ladies to get as many millions as their male counterparts.”— Eve Peyser, twitter.com
“Militarized femininity: Wonder Woman, new Lara Croft series, Natalie Portman’s upcoming film, nearly all female leads and supporting roles in Star Wars. Warriors, generals, militant rebels, assassins. What is the marketable, empowered ‘feminine’ as a mirror to the ‘masculine’ in the most militarized…”— Mauro Sifuentes, facebook.com
“I don't like the word feminist. I don't like the word ambitious. I do like the word anti-establishment”— Rei Kawakubo, dazeddigital.com
“I never say I do political art. Nor do I do feminist art. I’m a woman who’s a feminist, who makes art.”— Barbara Kruger, interviewmagazine.com
“It’s the micro that makes the macro. I have been a victim of each component of the sexual assault spectrum of which you speak. They all hurt. And they are all connected to a patriarchy intertwined with normalized, accepted--even welcomed-- misogyny. We are not outraged because someone grabbed our as…”— Alyssa Milano, twitter.com
“I actually think SCREW is less vulnerable simply because we exploit men and women equally. But I also feel that the feminist movement is full of shit. It is supposed to be this classless group of women, but in reality it's elitist. It's supposed to be protecting secretaries and barhops, but there ar…”— Al Goldstein, filthy.media
“The feminism that has gotten the media's attention is truly fascistic tyranny—you've gotta be politically correct. In many cases it's male-hating, it's blaming, it's childish and adolescent, and mostly it's pro-censorship. But I'm talkin' about the loud media feminists. I am a feminist, because I hi…”— Al Goldstein, jimgoad.net
“Gaining weight and pulling my head out of the toilet was the most political act I ever committed.”— Barbara Findlen, amazon.com
“It’s about who’s been pushing forward the voices of all women and not just their own. If Time wants to frame important people in the movement – it should be those that consistently rally for all women. It should be those that lack power and influence but made sacrifices and need the visibility.”— Gin, awesomelyluvvie.com
“2017 was a rough one for feminists. But it was also the year women stopped being nice and started getting mad.”— Jill Filipovic, twitter.com
“That’s why I write the kind of books I do! To help girls know they have worth, and will be okay in the end - like me!”— Meg Cabot, twitter.com
“I’m not married, because I can’t stomach the idea of marrying a woman inferior to me in mind and spirit. It would mean the death of my soul.”— Sarah J. Maas, Dorian Havilliard, amazon.com
“One of the things people always say to you if you get upset is, don't take it personally, but listen hard to what's going on and, please, I beg you, take it personally. Understand: every attack on Hillary Clinton for not knowing her place is an attack on you. Underneath almost all those attacks are…”— Nora Ephron, wellesley.edu
“I have always thought it was a terrible shame that the women's movement didn't realize how much easier it was to reach people by making them laugh than by shaking a fist and saying, 'Don't you see how oppressed you are?'”— Nora Ephron, telegraph.co.uk
“I keep hearing that men are afraid about the sexual harassment reckoning - scared that innocent people (them) will get implicated. Women are afraid, for good reason, every day. So I don't care even a little if men are feeling uncomfortable or scared right now. Better men are afraid than women are hu…”— Jessica Valenti, twitter.com
“So many of the conscious and unconscious ways men and women treat each other have to do with romantic and sexual fantasies that are deeply ingrained not just in society but in literature. The women's movement may manage to clean up the mess in society, but I don't know if it can clean up the mess in…”— Nora Ephron, books.google.com