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Post by mouse on Sept 23, 2018 8:09:32 GMT -5
www.msn.com/en-gb/news/uknews/the-remarkable-story-of-the-first-women-to-attend-a-british-university-150-years-on-and-the-graduates-they-inspired/ar-BBNgmA3?li="""The first women to attend a British university began their studies 150 years ago. Elizabeth Dearnley tells their stories and celebrates some of the fascinating graduates that they inspired In May 1869, nine women sat down to take their university exams. The previous year, they had become the first female students in Britain to be admitted to university, at the University of London. The paper was a “General Examination for Women”, a formidable test demanding proficiency in at least six subjects from Greek to chemistry. (It would be another decade until women were allowed to take exams alongside men). Only six of the women passed and were awarded honours, though one successfully resat the following year. But all of them were pioneers. The London Nine became teachers, writers, lawyers and suffragists – and paved the way for today’s female students. Download the all-new Microsoft News app – available now on iOS and Android In 2017, 48 per cent of women from the UK had entered higher education by the age of 19, a figure that looks set to rise still further. This year the University of London is marking the 150th anniversary of these nine students beginning their studies, celebrating the lives of 150 remarkable women from the university’s past and present with public events, talks and blog posts"""
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Post by mouse on Sept 23, 2018 8:17:38 GMT -5
why did it take so many centuries for women to be accorded the same rights as men to have education,, and to follow a course of their choosing surely they didn't aquire brains over night.. going from chattel to educational equal within a week …. its true many men were frieghtened of clever women and did their best inspite of the evidence to keep women tied to the sink and the nursery
Helena Normanton The first female barrister to practice in England was Helena Normanton, a University of London graduate who had first applied to the Middle Temple in 1918. Refused entry, she successfully reapplied within 48 hours of the 1919 Act being passed. Normanton went on to achieve a number of legal firsts. She was the first woman to obtain a divorce for her client, in 1922, the first to prosecute a murder case, in 1948, and one of the first two women, alongside Rose Heilbron, to be appointed King’s Counsel in 1949.
Louise Creighton One of the original London Nine was the writer and activist Louise von Glehn. Born into a liberal middle-class family in the south London suburb of Sydenham, she grew up attending lectures at the Crystal Palace, avidly reading history, and admiring the art critic John Ruskin. Passing the General Examination for Women with honours at the age of 18, she continued attending lectures – and it was at one of Ruskin’s that she met her husband, future Bishop of London, Mandell Creighton, after he admired her daringly bright-yellow scarf. Moving to Oxford, Creighton wrote historical biographies, a successful Child’s First History of England, and historical primers for children – in addition to having seven children herself. Creighton became caught up in the women’s suffrage movement in her 30s. Initially she was a voice against it, believing society benefited from having a large body of intelligent female opinion outside party politics. But later she was an increasingly outspoken supporter. In the 1880s she became the first president of the National Union of Women Workers, campaigning for “sympathy of thought and purpose” among working women.
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Post by mouse on Sept 23, 2018 8:21:45 GMT -5
to the best of my knowledge this remarkable woman did not attend university..... Ada Lovelace - Wikipedia en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ada_LovelaceAda Lovelace. Augusta Ada King-Noel, Countess of Lovelace (née Byron; 10 December 1815 – 27 November 1852) was an English mathematician and writer, chiefly known for her work on Charles Babbage's proposed mechanical general-purpose computer, the Analytical Engine. Died: 27 November 1852 (aged 36), Marylebone, London, England Born: 10 December 1815, London, England
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Post by kronks on Sept 24, 2018 2:58:39 GMT -5
why did it take so many centuries for women to be accorded the same rights as men to have education,, and to follow a course of their choosing surely they didn't aquire brains over night.. going from chattel to educational equal within a week …. its true many men were frieghtened of clever women and did their best inspite of the evidence to keep women tied to the sink and the nursery Helena Normanton The first female barrister to practice in England was Helena Normanton, a University of London graduate who had first applied to the Middle Temple in 1918. Refused entry, she successfully reapplied within 48 hours of the 1919 Act being passed. Normanton went on to achieve a number of legal firsts. She was the first woman to obtain a divorce for her client, in 1922, the first to prosecute a murder case, in 1948, and one of the first two women, alongside Rose Heilbron, to be appointed King’s Counsel in 1949. Louise Creighton One of the original London Nine was the writer and activist Louise von Glehn. Born into a liberal middle-class family in the south London suburb of Sydenham, she grew up attending lectures at the Crystal Palace, avidly reading history, and admiring the art critic John Ruskin. Passing the General Examination for Women with honours at the age of 18, she continued attending lectures – and it was at one of Ruskin’s that she met her husband, future Bishop of London, Mandell Creighton, after he admired her daringly bright-yellow scarf. Moving to Oxford, Creighton wrote historical biographies, a successful Child’s First History of England, and historical primers for children – in addition to having seven children herself. Creighton became caught up in the women’s suffrage movement in her 30s. Initially she was a voice against it, believing society benefited from having a large body of intelligent female opinion outside party politics. But later she was an increasingly outspoken supporter. In the 1880s she became the first president of the National Union of Women Workers, campaigning for “sympathy of thought and purpose” among working women. only the wealthy were educated back in those days. Rich women did not work they had poor women to do that for them.
Even these days few working class folk go to uni, not proper uni's though, just doss house to keep folk off the dole, go drinking and to be indoctrinated in feminist clap-trap.
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Post by mouse on Sept 24, 2018 3:06:03 GMT -5
why did it take so many centuries for women to be accorded the same rights as men to have education,, and to follow a course of their choosing surely they didn't aquire brains over night.. going from chattel to educational equal within a week …. its true many men were frieghtened of clever women and did their best inspite of the evidence to keep women tied to the sink and the nursery Helena Normanton The first female barrister to practice in England was Helena Normanton, a University of London graduate who had first applied to the Middle Temple in 1918. Refused entry, she successfully reapplied within 48 hours of the 1919 Act being passed. Normanton went on to achieve a number of legal firsts. She was the first woman to obtain a divorce for her client, in 1922, the first to prosecute a murder case, in 1948, and one of the first two women, alongside Rose Heilbron, to be appointed King’s Counsel in 1949. Louise Creighton One of the original London Nine was the writer and activist Louise von Glehn. Born into a liberal middle-class family in the south London suburb of Sydenham, she grew up attending lectures at the Crystal Palace, avidly reading history, and admiring the art critic John Ruskin. Passing the General Examination for Women with honours at the age of 18, she continued attending lectures – and it was at one of Ruskin’s that she met her husband, future Bishop of London, Mandell Creighton, after he admired her daringly bright-yellow scarf. Moving to Oxford, Creighton wrote historical biographies, a successful Child’s First History of England, and historical primers for children – in addition to having seven children herself. Creighton became caught up in the women’s suffrage movement in her 30s. Initially she was a voice against it, believing society benefited from having a large body of intelligent female opinion outside party politics. But later she was an increasingly outspoken supporter. In the 1880s she became the first president of the National Union of Women Workers, campaigning for “sympathy of thought and purpose” among working women. only the wealthy were educated back in those days. Rich women did not work they had poor women to do that for them.
Even these days few working class folk go to uni, not proper uni's though, just doss house to keep folk off the dole, go drinking and to be indoctrinated in feminist clap-trap.
generalisations again ….saddo… why kronks are you so eagar to demean women or is it that your predudices fuel your wrong presumptions women from all classes have excelled in all branches of live and social advancement...
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Post by mouse on Sept 24, 2018 6:12:12 GMT -5
Elizabeth Garrett Anderson (1836 - 1917),,, the 1st English female doctor... her father was a pawn broker later a business man .. hardly middle or upper class....and she was the first female mayor too
Anderson was a pioneering physician and political campaigner, the first Englishwoman to qualify as a doctor. Elizabeth Garrett was born in Whitechapel, east London, one of the 12 children of a pawnbroker. During her childhood her father became a successful businessman, enabling him to send his children to good schools. After school she was expected to marry well and live the life of a lady. However meetings with the feminist Emily Davies and Elizabeth Blackwell, the first American woman physician, convinced Elizabeth Garrett that she should become a doctor. This was unheard of in 19th century Britain and her attempts to study at a number of medical schools were denied. She enrolled as a nursing student at Middlesex Hospital and attended classes intended for male doctors, but was barred after complaints from other students. As the Society of Apothecaries did not specifically forbid women from taking their examinations, in 1865 she passed their exams and gained a certificate which enabled her to become a doctor. The society then changed its rules to prevent other women entering the profession this way. With her father's backing, in 1866 she established a dispensary for women in London and in 1870 was made a visiting physician to the East London Hospital. Here she met James Anderson, a successful businessman, who she married in 1871 and with whom she had three children. She remained determined to obtain a medical degree, so she taught herself French and went to the University of Paris, where she successfully earned her degree. The British Medical Register refused to recognise her qualification. In 1872, Anderson founded the New Hospital for Women in London (later renamed after its founder), staffed entirely by women. Anderson appointed her mentor, Elizabeth Blackwell, as the professor of gynaecology there. Anderson's determination paved the way for other women, and in 1876 an act was passed permitting women to enter the medical professions. In 1883, Anderson was appointed dean of the London School of Medicine for Women, which she had helped to found in 1874, and oversaw its expansion. In 1902, Anderson retired to Aldeburgh on the Suffolk coast. In 1908, she became the mayor of the town, the first female mayor in England. She was a member of the suffragette movement and her daughter Louisa was also a prominent suffragette. Anderson herself died on 17 December 1917.
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Post by mouse on Sept 24, 2018 6:18:19 GMT -5
archyfantasies.com/2012/01/03/women-in-archaeology-mary-anning-fossil-hunter-and-first-female-paleontologist/Mary Anning... working class girl..not middle or upper class.... Mary Anning was born in 1799 to Richard and Mary (Molly) Anning on the southern shores of Great Britain. The cliffs at Lyme Regis, not far from her home, were rich in spectacular fossils from the seas of the Jurassic period and these fossils provided a supplementary income for the Anning family. Richard Anning spent his free time hunting fossils in these cliffs until his death in 1810[1]. He often took his children with him to look, but it was Mary, not her brother, who proved to be adept at fossil hunting. Molly Anning took over the family business of selling fossils after her husband’s death, but the business provided little money despite the importance of the discoveries. That is, until the 1820’s when the professional fossil collector Lt.-Col. Thomas Birch met and befriended the family and was impressed by their contributions to the scientific community. He decided to hold an auction of some of his own collection and donated the money to the Anning family. He felt that the Annings should not live in such “considerable difficulty” considering that they have “found almost all the fine things, which have been submitted to scientific investigation…” [1]. By this time, Mary had established herself as the keen eye and accomplished anatomist of the family, and began taking charge of the family fossil business [1]. Mary received no formal schooling outside of some provided by her church. However she studied and read anything she could get her hands on, hand copying some manuscripts at times in such detail that it was difficult to pick the original form the copy. Thorough her own studies she became very well versed in the anatomy of fish and birds, performing her own dissections, and discussing with some of the great minds of her time [6]. Mary passed away in 1847 from breast cancer. She remained unmarried, but admired among her male peers in the geological community. Upon hearing of her cancer, the Geological Society members raised money to help with her expenses, and the newly created Dorset County Museum made her an honorary member. When she died she was buried at St. Michael’s, the local parish church.In 1850, Members of the Geological Society contributed a stained-glass window to the church in her memory. It bares an inscription reading: [5] “This window is sacred to the memory of Mary Anning of this parish, who died 9 March AD 1847 and is erected by the vicar and some members of the Geological Society of London in commemoration of her usefulness in furthering the science of geology, as also of her benevolence of heart and integrity of life.”[5] The president of the Geological Society, Henry De la Beche, wrote the first eulogy ever written for a woman by the Society. He read and published the eulogy in the Society’s quarterly transactions. This was an honor normally only given to fellows of the society and they didn’t began admitting women until 1904 [5]. The eulogy began: “I cannot close this notice of our losses by death without advertising to that of one, who though not placed among even the easier classes of society, but one who had to earn her daily bread by her labour, yet contributed by her talents and untiring researches in no small degree to our knowledge of the great Enalio-Saurians, and other forms of organic life entombed in the vicinity of Lyme Regis …” [5] Mary Anning has been credited with the first discovery of ichthyosaur fossils which she found when she was 10 or 12 years old. However, her most important find was the discovery of the first plesiosaur. This discovery allowed Mary to become a legitimate and respected fossilists in the eyes of the scientific community[1]. Still, the majority of Mary’s finds were not credited to her. Which unfortunately lead to the scientific community to forget about her and her family until recently [1]. Several books have recently been published about Mary Anning including The Fossil Hunter: Dinosaurs, Evolution, and the Woman whose Discoveries Changed the World by Shelley Emling, and Remarkable Creatures by Tracy Chevalier among the most recent. Mary’s gender and her lack of social status also contributed to her lack of recognition. Many scientists of the day could not believe that a woman of low status and no formal education could have the knowledge and skills that she did [1]. In 1824, Lady Harriet Sivester, wrote in her diary after visiting Mary Anning: “. . . the extraordinary thing in this young woman is that she has made herself so thoroughly acquainted with the science that the moment she finds any bones she knows to what tribe they belong. She fixes the bones on a frame with cement and then makes drawings and has them engraved. . . It is certainly a wonderful instance of divine favour – that this poor, ignorant girl should be so blessed, for by reading and application she has arrived to that degree of knowledge as to be in the habit of writing and talking with professors and other clever men on the subject, and they all acknowledge that she understands more of the science than anyone else in this kingdom [1].” High praise, but “divine favor” is used to explain how such a woman could possibly be so knowledgeable. Taking away from her hard work and hard won knowledge and skill. In 2005, Mary Anning was awarded two honors, she was named by the Royal Society as “the third most influential female scientist in British history.” They created a list named “The Royal Society’s list of the top ten women in British history who have had the most influence on science” to celebrate the Society’s 350th anniversary and its commitment to the advancement of women in science [2]. The Society’s mentions: “Anning’s gender and social class prevented her from fully participating in the scientific community of early 19th century Britain, and she did not always receive full credit for her contributions…Her observations also played a key role in the discovery that coprolites, known as bezoar stones at the time, were fossilized faeces.
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Post by mouse on Sept 25, 2018 2:46:50 GMT -5
Boudicca (died 60/61AD)[no university for this one] First comes Boudicca, warrior queen of the ancient Iceni tribe, who led a rebellion that nearly ended Roman rule in Britain. When the Romans plundered the tribe’s lands in modern-day Norfolk, Cambridgeshire and Suffolk, flogged Boudicca and raped her two daughters, the Iceni rose up. With other tribes, they wiped out the Romans’ Ninth Legion and sacked their strongholds at Colchester, London and St Albans, taking no prisoners (according to Roman historians) and massacring at least 70,000. But it is Boudicca alone, standing tall and Titian-haired in her chariot, who is remembered among the freedom fighters, and honoured with a dramatic statue, arms raised, by Thomas Thornycroft, near London’s Westminster Pier.
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Post by mouse on Sept 25, 2018 2:53:14 GMT -5
www.regencyhistory.net/2016/01/elizabeth-fry-prison-reformer-1780-1845.htmlElizabeth Fry (née Gurney) (21 May 1780 – 13 October 1845) was a Quaker minister famous for her pioneering work in prison reform. She is currently depicted on the British £5 note. An unhappy childhood Elizabeth Gurney was born in Norwich, Norfolk, on 21 May 1780, one of the 12 children of John Gurney and Catherine Bell. Both her parents were from families that belonged to the Religious Society of Friends, more commonly referred to as the Quakers. John Gurney was a wealthy businessman operating in the woollen cloth and banking industries. Elizabeth, known as Betsy, was moody, often unwell and tormented by numerous fears. She was dubbed stupid by her siblings for being slow to learn, but was most probably dyslexic. In 1792, Betsy was devastated when her mother died. Conversion Betsy’s family were ‘gay’ Quakers as opposed to ‘plain’ Quakers. Though they attended the weekly Quaker meetings, they did not abstain from worldly pleasures like the theatre and dancing or wear simple clothes as ‘plain’ Quakers did
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Post by kronks on Sept 25, 2018 2:56:51 GMT -5
only the wealthy were educated back in those days. Rich women did not work they had poor women to do that for them.
Even these days few working class folk go to uni, not proper uni's though, just doss house to keep folk off the dole, go drinking and to be indoctrinated in feminist clap-trap.
generalisations again ….saddo… why kronks are you so eagar to demean women or is it that your predudices fuel your wrong presumptions women from all classes have excelled in all branches of live and social advancement... I am not demeaning women, just saying they do not have act like men.
What benefit have we seen from excellence of all these women?
Not much, banking and economic collapse, huge increase in immigration, odd how female leader welcome the most misogynistic of men into their country when in power? Look at Sweden, they can't get enough muslims.
When I tune into politics program now all I see is women with their boobs hanging out.
The country is in rapid decline.
Then you have confused feminists running around half naked, seems they lost the plot somewhere.
And inequality has massively increased.
It is only women from the upper and upper middle classes who are doing well (as the country crumbles), even bridges are collapsing.
Standards are lowered to allow more women in ie as in the firebrigade, and in education too I believe, less emphasise on exams, more on copying stuff off the internet etc..
Same in the police force, they are not stopping people being hurt by being assaulted, stabbed or shot, they are stopping people being hurt by a witty but true comment on social media.
The police are not interested in arresting the person who mugged you but they are interested in arresting any man up compliments a woman on her appearance for a "hate crime".
They have gone even further, they want women to report things which are not a crime on the internet but merely hurt their feelings.
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Post by kronks on Sept 25, 2018 2:59:37 GMT -5
Elizabeth Garrett Anderson (1836 - 1917),,, the 1st English female doctor... her father was a pawn broker later a business man .. hardly middle or upper class....and she was the first female mayor too Anderson was a pioneering physician and political campaigner, the first Englishwoman to qualify as a doctor. Elizabeth Garrett was born in Whitechapel, east London, one of the 12 children of a pawnbroker. During her childhood her father became a successful businessman, enabling him to send his children to good schools. After school she was expected to marry well and live the life of a lady. However meetings with the feminist Emily Davies and Elizabeth Blackwell, the first American woman physician, convinced Elizabeth Garrett that she should become a doctor. This was unheard of in 19th century Britain and her attempts to study at a number of medical schools were denied. She enrolled as a nursing student at Middlesex Hospital and attended classes intended for male doctors, but was barred after complaints from other students. As the Society of Apothecaries did not specifically forbid women from taking their examinations, in 1865 she passed their exams and gained a certificate which enabled her to become a doctor. The society then changed its rules to prevent other women entering the profession this way. With her father's backing, in 1866 she established a dispensary for women in London and in 1870 was made a visiting physician to the East London Hospital. Here she met James Anderson, a successful businessman, who she married in 1871 and with whom she had three children. She remained determined to obtain a medical degree, so she taught herself French and went to the University of Paris, where she successfully earned her degree. The British Medical Register refused to recognise her qualification. In 1872, Anderson founded the New Hospital for Women in London (later renamed after its founder), staffed entirely by women. Anderson appointed her mentor, Elizabeth Blackwell, as the professor of gynaecology there. Anderson's determination paved the way for other women, and in 1876 an act was passed permitting women to enter the medical professions. In 1883, Anderson was appointed dean of the London School of Medicine for Women, which she had helped to found in 1874, and oversaw its expansion. In 1902, Anderson retired to Aldeburgh on the Suffolk coast. In 1908, she became the mayor of the town, the first female mayor in England. She was a member of the suffragette movement and her daughter Louisa was also a prominent suffragette. Anderson herself died on 17 December 1917.
Good for them?
But what about the patients?
Medicine is not a job creation scheme for women.
There are no actually achievements there.
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Post by mouse on Sept 25, 2018 3:00:52 GMT -5
www.bbc.co.uk/history/historic_figures/bronte_sisters.shtmlThe Brontë Sisters (1818-1855) no university and no money either Anne, Emily and Charlotte Bronte, c.1834 © Charlotte, Emily and Anne Brontë were sisters and writers whose novels have become classics. Charlotte was born on 21 April 1816, Emily on 30 July 1818 and Anne on 17 January 1820 all in Thornton, Yorkshire. They had two sisters, both of whom died in childhood and a brother, Branwell. Their father, Patrick, was an Anglican clergyman who was appointed as the rector of the village of Haworth, on the Yorkshire moors. After the death of their mother in 1821, their Aunt Elizabeth came to look after the family. All three sisters attended different schools at various times as well as being taught at home. The Brontë children were often left alone together in their isolated home and all began to write stories at an early age. All three sisters were employed at various times as teachers and governesses. In 1842, Charlotte and Emily went to Brussels to improve their French, but had to return home early after the death of their aunt Elizabeth. Charlotte returned to Brussels an English teacher in 1843-1844. By 1845, the family were back together at Haworth. By this stage, Branwell was addicted to drink and drugs. In May 1846, the sisters published at their own expense a volume of poetry. This was the first use of their pseudonyms Currer (Charlotte), Ellis (Emily) and Acton (Anne) Bell. They all went on to publish novels, with differing levels of success. Anne's 'Agnes Grey' and Charlotte's 'Jane Eyre' were published in 1847. 'Jane Eyre' was one of the year's best sellers. Anne's second novel, 'The Tenant of Wildfell Hall' and Emily's 'Wuthering Heights' were both published in 1848. 'The Tenant' sold well, but 'Wuthering Heights' did not. Branwell died of tuberculosis in September 1848. Emily died of the same disease on 19 December 1848 and Anne on 28 May 1849. Left alone with her father, Charlotte continued to write. She was by now a well-known author and visited London a number of times. 'Shirley' was published in 1849 and 'Villette' in 1853. In 1854, Charlotte married her father's curate, Arthur Nicholls. She died of tuberculosis on 31 March 1855.
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Post by mouse on Sept 25, 2018 3:08:16 GMT -5
Elizabeth Garrett Anderson (1836 - 1917),,, the 1st English female doctor... her father was a pawn broker later a business man .. hardly middle or upper class....and she was the first female mayor too Anderson was a pioneering physician and political campaigner, the first Englishwoman to qualify as a doctor. Elizabeth Garrett was born in Whitechapel, east London, one of the 12 children of a pawnbroker. During her childhood her father became a successful businessman, enabling him to send his children to good schools. After school she was expected to marry well and live the life of a lady. However meetings with the feminist Emily Davies and Elizabeth Blackwell, the first American woman physician, convinced Elizabeth Garrett that she should become a doctor. This was unheard of in 19th century Britain and her attempts to study at a number of medical schools were denied. She enrolled as a nursing student at Middlesex Hospital and attended classes intended for male doctors, but was barred after complaints from other students. As the Society of Apothecaries did not specifically forbid women from taking their examinations, in 1865 she passed their exams and gained a certificate which enabled her to become a doctor. The society then changed its rules to prevent other women entering the profession this way. With her father's backing, in 1866 she established a dispensary for women in London and in 1870 was made a visiting physician to the East London Hospital. Here she met James Anderson, a successful businessman, who she married in 1871 and with whom she had three children. She remained determined to obtain a medical degree, so she taught herself French and went to the University of Paris, where she successfully earned her degree. The British Medical Register refused to recognise her qualification. In 1872, Anderson founded the New Hospital for Women in London (later renamed after its founder), staffed entirely by women. Anderson appointed her mentor, Elizabeth Blackwell, as the professor of gynaecology there. Anderson's determination paved the way for other women, and in 1876 an act was passed permitting women to enter the medical professions. In 1883, Anderson was appointed dean of the London School of Medicine for Women, which she had helped to found in 1874, and oversaw its expansion. In 1902, Anderson retired to Aldeburgh on the Suffolk coast. In 1908, she became the mayor of the town, the first female mayor in England. She was a member of the suffragette movement and her daughter Louisa was also a prominent suffragette. Anderson herself died on 17 December 1917. Good for them? But what about the patients? Medicine is not a job creation scheme for women. There are no actually achievements there.
so these women getting education and training is no achievemt in you eyes... the fact they did it inspite of every obstical is a remarkable achievement … that you are too twisted and lacking to see and understand that is your misfortune what do you mean.. what about the patcient?
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Post by mouse on Sept 25, 2018 3:11:22 GMT -5
generalisations again ….saddo… why kronks are you so eagar to demean women or is it that your predudices fuel your wrong presumptions women from all classes have excelled in all branches of live and social advancement... I am not demeaning women, just saying they do not have act like men. What benefit have we seen from excellence of all these women? Not much, banking and economic collapse, huge increase in immigration, odd how female leader welcome the most misogynistic of men into their country when in power? Look at Sweden, they can't get enough muslims. When I tune into politics program now all I see is women with their boobs hanging out. The country is in rapid decline. Then you have confused feminists running around half naked, seems they lost the plot somewhere.
And inequality has massively increased. It is only women from the upper and upper middle classes who are doing well (as the country crumbles), even bridges are collapsing. Standards are lowered to allow more women in ie as in the firebrigade, and in education too I believe, less emphasise on exams, more on copying stuff off the internet etc.. Same in the police force, they are not stopping people being hurt by being assaulted, stabbed or shot, they are stopping people being hurt by a witty but true comment on social media. The police are not interested in arresting the person who mugged you but they are interested in arresting any man up compliments a woman on her appearance for a "hate crime". They have gone even further, they want women to report things which are not a crime on the internet but merely hurt their feelings.
kronks wrote ""What benefit have we seen from excellence of all these women?""" …. what an unbelievably moronic statement from you kronks .and pretty disgusting too
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Post by kronks on Sept 26, 2018 2:40:24 GMT -5
Good for them? But what about the patients? Medicine is not a job creation scheme for women. There are no actually achievements there.
so these women getting education and training is no achievemt in you eyes... the fact they did it inspite of every obstical is a remarkable achievement … that you are too twisted and lacking to see and understand that is your misfortune what do you mean.. what about the patcient?
Well no more an achievement that it is for a man. There are obstacle no more than for a man.
I said what about the patients.
Is it good for them?
Life expectancy has stalled in the UK, inequality is growing?
Who is being helped?
Posh women that is all.
NO working class girl is gonna be a doctor they can't afford it.
Are we getting the best or just the wealthiest?
I care about the common good not "equality"
And have more "equality" whilst inequality is growing shows it is fake equality.
I am not twisted, society is very twisted.
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