Eco Feminism Hack #5

Earth day was started in the 70s as a part of the environmental movement. This movement, along with other movements, grew out of the civil rights movement. One of these movements was the feminist movement. From these two movements, environmental and feminist, grew a new movement. Eco-feminism holds that in order to end female oppression and environmental degradation humans must reject traditional patriarchal values. Rather than gender defined identities, Eco-feminism asserts that we are all a combination of masculinity and femininity. Life can only exist in harmony with a balance between the two. Eco-feminism argues that humans and nature are not separate but actually one in the same. In order to sustain humans on earth we must learn to live with nature, not dominate it, and we must learn to embrace both our masculine and feminine sides.

JAH

Hack #5

http://www.nbc.com/saturday-night-live/video/sarah-palin-and-hillary-clinton-address-the-nation/n12287

This is a video of two of my favorite feminists, Tina Fey and Amy Pohler. In the skit, they display that there are many different forms of feminism, especially at 2:22. Here, Sarah Palin (Tina Fey) asks that the media stops using words that diminish them such as “pretty, attractive, and beautiful” and Hillary Clinton (Amy Pohler) asks the same thing and gives the examples “harpy, shrewd, and boner-shrinker.”

Hack #5

The Black Panther Party was a revolutionary black nationalist and socialist organization active from the years of 1966 to 1982. At first, the Black Panther Party’s core practice was to monitor the behavior of police officers and to challenge police brutality after several incidents of brutal, unnecessary police attacks. It was once said that the party was “the greatest threat to the internal security of the country”. Other than monitoring police activity, the BPP’s instituted a variety of community social programs, including the Free Breakfast for Children Programs and community health clinics. black_panther_08_70-police_terrorism

Hack #5

Today, April 22, we celebrate Earth Day, an international celebration of Mother Nature and everything around us in the natural world. The first Earth Day was celebrated in 1970, when it was declared a national holiday. 45 years later, however, we still face numerous environmental issues, such as climate change, CFC emissions, more extreme natural disasters, and the melting of the polar ice caps. Even though we try to raise awareness once a year to protect the earth, we still fail to make any actual impacts. 45 years later, we, especially the United States, are still destroying our environment.

Hack 5

President John F. Kennedy was assassinated in Dallas, Texas on November 22, 1963. Oswald was killed before confessing he had killed President Kennedy. As of today his assassination is still considered a mystery. Kennedy was wounded in the back, throat and fatally shot in the head. Kennedy was rushed to the hospital but there was nothing the doctors could do and was pronounced dead. On Sunday morning as Oswald was being transferred to the county jail, Kennedy’s casket was moved from the white house to the capital. Many people in the United States mourned the death of Kennedy. Many people liked Kennedy and felt their lives were similar to his. Below is a picture of when the assassination occurred.

president

http://www.michaelparenti.org/excerpt_the_jfk_assassination_defending_the_gangster_state.html

Hack #5

Today in lecture and small section we talked a lot about the feminist movement and women fighting for equal rights. Recently, my friend Michaela showed me the theme song for a show called Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt, a show about a woman who was captured by a cult for 15 years and was found and is now trying to immerse herself back into regular life. She is “unbreakable” because she takes her plight in stride and tries to live her life normally and positively. This related because in the theme song, one of the lines is “Females are strong as hell.” This is something that empowers females and would be a viewpoint that could be beneficial for the feminist movement today, and could’ve been back during the 1960s-1970s of the second wave of feminism.

12154319   But females are strong as hell! Unbreakable! Unbreakable Kimmy Schmit

Hack #5

Screen Shot 2015-04-22 at 1.35.51 PM

Today in our small section, we talked heavily about the Women’s Movement and the effect it has left on society today. I was able to connect a lot of the points we talked about in class because I took a Women’s Studies class last semester. The class and the discussion today has helped expose me to a lot of the injustices of the past and some that still persist. I think it is important to talk about such issues so that we can continue to progress and move forward.

Hack #6 — Paying for Pink

Today, we focused in both large and small lecture on women’s movements. In small section specifically, there was much focus on the gender based wage gap in America today. (On average in California specifically, a woman only earn 84 cents for every dollar a man earns doing the same job.) When I was on my friend’s Tumblr account the other day, I noticed a post that struck me, because although we all know about the wage gap, I had no idea the difference in product pricing in stores. This phenomenon is often referred to as “The Pink Tax”.

http://micdotcom.tumblr.com/post/117002786678/watch-the-pink-tax-is-secretly-costing-women

The Pink Tax

The Pink Tax

Hack #5

tylerloptien's avatartloptien

Jackie_Robinson_Day_Logo

April 15th was a week ago from today. That day is significantly valued higher in Major League Baseball and a triumph in the african-american community. What makes April 15th so significant? April 15 was Opening Day in 1947, Jackie Robinson’s first season in the Major Leagues. His debut with the Brooklyn Dodgers (today known as the Los Angeles Dodgers) ended approximately eighty years of baseball segregation, also known as the baseball color line, or color barrier. On that one day, all players, coaches, and managers on both teams, and the umpires, wear #42 on their jerseys to celebrate Jackie Robinson and his contribution to both baseball and our country in general.

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HACK #6

In the final chapter of Hist the text begins to discuss the early 2000’s and where are government is now. As we know we have had the struggles with the war on terror, the first black president, 9/11, the boom of social media, and of course the sad expansion or reality television. The era that has become the 2000’s has shown us how much the generation has changed since the Reconstruction in 1865 and molded us into the country we are today. It would be interesting to seeing what the next publication of Hist has in 20 years and see where history has been taken as we are all constantly hacking into history on a daily basis.