Explaining Feminism in 1968
In The Second Feminist Wave, Martha Weinman Lear report on the activities of the new libbers of the 1960s womens movement, including the National Organization for Women. promptly was not quite two years old in March 1968, but the organization was making its womens voices heard across the U.S. The article offered explanation and analysis from Betty Friedan, then president of NOW.
Martha Weinman Lear describe such NOW activities as:
Picketing newspapers (including The New York Times) in kick of sex-segregated help wanted ads
Arguing on behalf of airline stewardesses at the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission
Pushing for the repeal of tout ensemble state abortion laws
Lobbying for the Equal Rights Amendment (also known as ERA) in Congress
What Women Want
The Second Feminist Wave also examined the often ridiculed narrative of feminism and the fact that some women distanced themselves from the movement. Anti-feminist voices said U.S. women were comfortable in their role and were lucky to be the most privileged women on earth. In the anti-feminist view, Martha Weinman Lear wrote, the status quo is plenty good enough. In the feminist view, it is a sellout: American women have traded their rights for their comfort, and now are alike comfortable to care.
In answering the question of what women want, Martha Weinman Lear listed some of NOWs wee goals:
Total enforcement of Title VII of the Civil Rights Act
Nationwide mesh of community pincer care centers
Tax deductions for housekeeping and child care expenses for working parents
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