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13 votes
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A comparison of women's and men's pocket sizes
39 votes -
Saudi Arabia seeks its first death penalty against a female human rights activist
10 votes -
North Ayrshire Council offers free menstrual products
4 votes -
Women are 75% more likely to watch hardcore videos and 63% more likely to watch rough sex videos compared to men
9 votes -
Right after a period, women have better spatial awareness. Three weeks after, verbal skills peak. It turns out the monthly cycle does change the brain – but not in the ways you think.
10 votes -
‘Just a piece of meat’: How homeless women have little choice but to use sex for survival
11 votes -
Six months at Riot Games
31 votes -
Inside the culture of sexism at Riot Games
32 votes -
People who ask "are you pregnant?"
Why? Quick story: I was in an elevator with a coworker I didn't really know and he told me a story of when he asked a stranger in a restaurant if she were pregnant. She was not! And he said he was...
Why?
Quick story: I was in an elevator with a coworker I didn't really know and he told me a story of when he asked a stranger in a restaurant if she were pregnant. She was not! And he said he was so embarrassed that he had to leave.
I didn't get a chance to ask him, so I'm asking you fellow tilderinos - why ask this question at all? Especially to a stranger? What motivates this question? Is it really asking why someone looks fat?
Have you been on the receiving end of this question? (If you're a women older than 25, I'm going to guess yes). What are your stories?
15 votes -
Boris Johnson's burka jibe: Why do some Muslim women wear the veil?
4 votes -
Women doctors 'best for female heart patients'
3 votes -
'With my laptop and enthusiasm': This physicist is adding hundreds of women scientists to Wikipedia
16 votes -
Japanese medical school deducted points from exam scores of female applicants
12 votes -
What it takes to be a trial lawyer if you're not a man
10 votes -
Hospitals know how to protect mothers. They just aren't doing it.
10 votes -
The 'great divide' in women's friendships
8 votes -
Why mainstream health organisations are finally starting to work with LGBTIQ+ women
2 votes -
Why I fought the sexist gear community (and won)
8 votes -
Doctor Who star Jodie Whittaker wants to encourage the “other half” of the population as the first female Doctor
7 votes -
What the reality of breastfeeding looks like in the US
12 votes -
Women making science videos on YouTube face hostile comments
11 votes -
MC the M is for misogyny: Does hip hop hate women?
3 votes -
Miranda Devine claims that trans women are "culturally appropriating" womanhood
8 votes -
A disastrous time for abuse of women in this country
23 votes -
Time to ditch the Pap test? Research suggests HPV testing is a better way to spot cervical cancer
4 votes -
The murders we don't hear about — and why
6 votes -
Top five feminist film tropes
4 votes -
US opposition to breast-feeding resolution stuns World Health officials
14 votes -
US opposition to breast-feeding resolution stuns World Health officials
19 votes -
Susan Collins, pivotal US moderate, says ‘hostility’ to Roe would sway her vote
13 votes -
Damsel in distress Part 1 - Tropes vs. women in video games
12 votes -
How community management and policing internet trolls became women's work
7 votes -
Ten worst female character pet peeves
6 votes -
The young women changing the face of Aussie rules
4 votes -
Canadian defence lawyer asks sex assault complainant why she didn't clench her legs together
6 votes -
Toowoomba woman wins court bid to use her dead boyfriend's sperm to have a baby
8 votes -
So apparently there's an ongoing controversy about Battlefield V allowing you to play as a female character
Any perspectives on that, fellow Tildoes? Tildarians, Tilderinos, Tildonkeys, etc.? From what I can tell, the main argument against it is that it's not historically accurate. I guess that makes...
Any perspectives on that, fellow Tildoes? Tildarians, Tilderinos, Tildonkeys, etc.?
From what I can tell, the main argument against it is that it's not historically accurate. I guess that makes sense, but A) that doesn't seem to warrant the utter seething rage that I see from opponents, and B) I rather doubt the Battlefield franchise has made it a habit to be 1-to-1 regarding history anyway. I've played none of them, but I saw someone mention that in-game events are definitely not historically accurate anyway. So I guess the "keep women out" side is conflating the game's setting with a declaration of dedication to historical accuracy? Seems silly to me to take umbrage at a game failing to meet an expectation that you invented.
Then again, maybe I'm wrong. My initial gut reaction was to write it off as casual sexism and an unwillingness to break tradition, and while I'm sure that explains a minority of the outrage, I highly doubt the controversy can be explained so simply.
Anyone here want to way in?
31 votes -
The hidden history of the women who built the computer age
13 votes -
'Shocking' level of sexual harassment at music festivals
12 votes -
The health gap: How women experience the medical system
14 votes -
The health risks of maturing early
6 votes -
Spain now has the most female cabinet in Europe
16 votes -
Margaret Atwood: 'If the ocean dies, so do we'
7 votes -
Denmark bans the burqa and niqab
15 votes -
Paraguay to have its first woman president, at least temporarily, after outgoing leader Horacio Cartes stepped down Monday ahead of schedule
9 votes -
Abortion: Sanctity of Human Life and the Rights of (wo)Man
Yesterday, Ireland passed a referendum that will repeal a constitutional amendment that banned abortions. The government of Ireland will now have the explicit authority (as soon as the results are...
Yesterday, Ireland passed a referendum that will repeal a constitutional amendment that banned abortions. The government of Ireland will now have the explicit authority (as soon as the results are certified) to legislate matters of abortion directly. This seems likely to lead to a substantially less restrictive stance toward abortion in one of the most restrictive member nations of the EU. It would still likely end up being slightly more restrictive law than in the United States.
Ireland's history regarding abortion's legality is explicitly tied as a counter-reaction to Roe V. Wade, the American supreme court case that found abortion legal until the third trimester under a rights-balancing test under the 9th and 14th amendments (which--implicitly--enshrines a right to privacy and--explicitly--expands that right to the state level, respectively). While this balancing test was later changed to a standard requiring "fetal viability," states and activists through the United States organized against the Supreme Court's decision to create new limitations on abortion.
So today, I'm seeking to sidestep some of that history to wrestle with the core underlying balancing test Roe v Wade and other similar legal frameworks have tried to answer: when is a pregnant woman's rights more or less important than the life of the living being growing inside of her? In what circumstances (if any) should a woman be allowed to choose to end her pregnancy?
19 votes -
Winnipeg girl, three, forbidden from wearing 'inappropriate' sundress to preschool
11 votes -
Ireland ends abortion ban as 'quiet revolution' transforms country
13 votes -
Ireland’s abortion vote becomes a test for Facebook and Google
5 votes