Anonymous ID: f31939 Aug. 19, 2020, 3:44 p.m. No.10347562   🗄️.is đź”—kun

Working Theory

The Brock/Soros minions trolled up for a Q that, if denied, would discourage US, not Trump.

Like everything else that they have done, they Failed!

 

IS THAT SUCH A BAD THING?

Anonymous ID: f31939 Aug. 19, 2020, 3:53 p.m. No.10347772   🗄️.is đź”—kun

>>10347416

But was it? The most famous lesbian in America in the 19th century was suffragist Susan B. Anthony, whose affairs with women–the aforementioned Elizabeth Cady Stanton as well as Rachel Avery, Anna Dickinson, and Emily Gross–were well-known even at the time.

 

Anthony was one of the most ardent and vociferous suffragists and as such was targeted by the media as a "manly," which was the worst accusation that could be hurled at a woman. It was an accusation she refuted in a 1900 essay titled "The New Century's Manly Woman."

 

Anthony believed strongly that women were damaged by their relationships with men, which she perceived as stifling a woman's talents and abilities beyond the maintaining of home and family. Ida B. Wells, the journalist, suffragist and civil rights activist, complained that once she married and had her first child, Anthony was annoyed with her, telling her that she was too talented for marriage and motherhood.

 

In erasing the physical passion of the lesbian relationships among suffragists, historians miss the importance that that sexual component had for these women–the very reason their heterosexual peers married: companionable, accessible, intimate sex.

 

In her love affair with Dickinson, Anthony wrote flirtatiously. But it had been Dickinson–much pursued by other women–who had pursued the older Anthony. She wrote, "I want to see you very much indeed, to hold your hand in mine, to hear your voice, in a word, I want you - I can't have you? Well, I will at least put down a little fragment of my foolish self and send it to look up at you."

 

https://www.eriegaynews.com/news/article.php?recordid=201811lgbthistoryprojectionlesbianism2