Wednesday, November 27, 2019

Jada Garrison Essays - Hashtags, World Wide Web, Computing

Jada Garrison Essays - Hashtags, World Wide Web, Computing Jada Garrison College Writing 1 ENG - 11011 - 007 11 October 2017 #WeNeedAnUnderstanding "When men say no in this culture, it's the end of the discussion. When a woman says no, it's the beginning of a negotiation. #YesAllWomen", posted by Zoe (@PowerViolence) via Twitter. #YesAllWomen is a worldwide hashtag twitter movement. This Twitter movement was created to let women share their experiences with one another about abuse towards women. This movement lets women from all across the globe come together and support one another in a time where support is needed. I think this hashtag movement is unique, these women are taking a stand on how men treat women and tell how oppression towards women is still present today. I feel this tweet is a great example of what the women partaking in the hashtag movement are trying to bring to attention. The movement, #YesAllWomen, was started in a response to a premeditated mass shooting, the Isla Vista Killings of 2014, that occurred in Santa Barbra. This shooting was planned and carried out by Elliot Rodgers, he had released a one hundred and forty page "misogynist manifesto" and posted a video to Youtube just before the shootings. The video and text both told of how he wanted to punish women who had rejected him in the past and envied sexually active men for their sexual activity. His greed took seven lives, including his own, and injured fourteen others. Leila Jade (@LeilaJL) posted to Twitter "Let's call the #Isla #Vista #Killings What They Were: #Misogynist #Extremism https://newrepublic.com/article/117908/isla-vista-killings-were-misogynist-extremism via @tnr #YesAllWomen". She included an article that continues to tell how misogyny is nothing new to us but continues to go unaddressed. 463550-127000 (Image 1) This Tweet published by Kaitlyn (@365OfMariskaH) shows the cruel honesty of today's society, this tweet also shows qualities of equivocation. No matter what you decide there's always a downfall, you can never achieve acceptance. If you stay pure you're a "square" but if you decide otherwise you'll be slut shammed. The movement makes interesting points on how men classify women based on their sexual morals and values. This Tweet unleashes the ugly truth of sexism and the double standards between men and women. It makes a guy cool to have multiple girls at his hip waiting for him, but for a girl to be in the same situation she must be a whore. These double standards mislead women into thinking that we should give all of our attention to a guy who may not be giving us the light of day, we get our hopes up time after time but still fall back into the same traps. With all of the uproar on the #YesAllWomen movement a second hashtag movement came about, #NotAllMen. This movement was intended for men to use to argue that not all men are like the ones being addressed by the #YesAllWomen movement. Soraya Chemaly (@schemaly) posted via Twitter "#NotAllMen practice violence against women but #YesAllWomen live with the threat of male violence. Every. Single. Day. All over the world." We need to understand that these movements are not out to pin each other against the wall and victimize one another. But that they are here to raise awareness, the #NotAllMen movement makes a huge impact Even though the #YesAllWomen movement was based off of an event that occurred in America, it has reached people from across the world. At each corner of the map girls are taught from a young age that girls are weak and boys are strong. These stereotypical thoughts are bashed into the heads of young women. Young girls are taught to dress appropriately, you wouldn't want men to get the wrong idea from the outfit that you are wearing. In an article "Around the World, Girls Are Taught the Same Limiting Lesson" published by The Huffington Post says, "Girls are taught from a very young age to be careful about how they dress and cover up their bodies essentially to keep themselves safe from sexual assault" and "In the U.S.it means girls get sent home from school because their skirt is too short. Boys aren't sent home for their physical appearance." As we all may know this topic being plastered all over every social

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