“Kavanaugh doesn’t seem to fit neatly into an incel bucket. On one hand, he’s a prototypical “Chad,” an athletic white guy in a powerful social order in an Ivy League school. But on the other hand, that doesn’t dissuade the incels from believing in Kavanaugh’s innocence.”— Quinn Myers, melmagazine.com
“Dr. Jennifer Melfi: What's the one thing, every woman, your mother, your wife, your daughter, have in common? Tony Soprano: They all break my balls.”— Frank Renzulli, Tony Soprano, James Gandolfini, imdb.com
“Understand that, as a man, the consequences you’ll face are ultimately less damaging than what women and other marginalized voices experience in the same position.”— Alison Stevenson, melmagazine.com
“Sherlock Holmes: You seem even more dour than usual, Watson. I would posit it was a menstruation issue but I worked out your cycle. You're good for ten more days. Dr. Joan Watson: Couching it as a scientific observation totally negates the misogyny.”— Christopher Silber, Dr. Joan Watson, Lucy Liu, imdb.com
“Women shouldn’t have to be the canaries in the coal mines of violence and misogyny. But often we are. We burn first.”— Jessica Valenti, thecut.com
“If you want to know what normalization of misogyny looks like, it's characterizing domestic violence as just a *different kind* of family values.”— Jessica Valenti, twitter.com
“It never occurred to me that a female wanting to do comedy was unusual or an act of rebellion.”— Arden Myrin, refinery29.com
“I really resent the idea that just because someone does not believe that women owe men sex, that boys are naturally superior, and that feminism is a conspiracy to destroy the human race, that that person ‘hates men.’ I care about men too much to think so poorly of them.”— Laurie Penny, twitter.com
“It’s incredibly misogynist to tell me I can only write a certain type of woman. Because that’s saying women must be a certain type of person.”— Gillian Flynn, vanityfair.com
“If men are so inherently orderly and logical, they can control themselves in a orderly and logical fashion and not kill people because they aren't getting what they want when they want it. Otherwise I don't want to hear any more about how chaotic women are.”— Catherynne Valente, twitter.com
“It's really not that hard to tell when someone hates women. It's literally in their words and their work. Ask yourself why you're not paying attention.”— Aminatou Sow, twitter.com
“No matter how much women prefer to lean, to be protected and supported, nor how much men desire to have them do so, they must make the voyage of life alone, and for safety in an emergency they must know something of the laws of navigation.”— Elizabeth Cady Stanton, amazon.com
“We must demand that the pulpit be no longer desecrated by men who read passages of Scripture or preach from texts that teach subordination of one-half the human race to the other.”— Elizabeth Cady Stanton, ecssba.rutgers.edu
“Man cannot speak for us—because he has been educated to believe that we differ from him so materially, that he cannot judge of our thoughts, feelings and opinions by his own. Moral beings can only judge of others by themselves—the moment they give a different nature to any of their own kind they utt…”— Elizabeth Cady Stanton, ecssba.rutgers.edu
“In the criminal code we find no feminine pronouns, as ‘He,’ ‘His,’ ‘Him,’ we are arrested, tried and hung, but singularly enough, we are denied the highest privileges of citizens, because the pronouns ‘She,’ ‘Hers’ and ‘Her,’ are not found in the constitutions.”— Elizabeth Cady Stanton, amazon.com
“In fact the wives of the patriarchs, all untruthful, and one a kleptomaniac, but illustrate the law, that the cardinal virtues are seldom found in oppressed classes.”— Elizabeth Cady Stanton, amazon.com
“The only points in which I differ from all ecclesiastical teaching is that I do not believe that any man ever saw or talked with God, I do not believe that God inspired the Mosaic code, or told the historians what they say he did about woman, for all the religions on the face of the earth degrade he…”— Elizabeth Cady Stanton, amazon.com
“The Bible teaches that woman brought sin and death into the world, that she precipitated the fall of the race, that she was arraigned before the judgment seat of Heaven, tried, condemned and sentenced. Marriage for her was to be a condition of bondage, maternity a period of suffering and anguish, an…”— Elizabeth Cady Stanton, amazon.com
“Whatever the theories may be of woman’s dependence on man, in the supreme moments of her life he can not bear her burdens. Alone she goes to the gates of death to give life to every man that is born into the world. No one can share her fears, no one can mitigate her pangs; and if her sorrow is great…”— Elizabeth Cady Stanton, amazon.com