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Male Chauvinism Quotes

Quotes tagged as "male-chauvinism" Showing 1-9 of 9
“Jay Levy saw ten women," the doctor later recalled, "And he thought they were all hysterical. Then he saw a man, whose complaints he took seriously.”
Hillary Johnson, Osler's Web: Inside the Labyrinth of the Chronic Fatigue Syndrome Epidemic

Mokokoma Mokhonoana
“Some men are so indoctrinated that they sincerely believe that other than cooking and cleaning the only thing that a woman can do better than them is being a woman.”
Mokokoma Mokhonoana

Ma Jian
“Beauty can make a woman rich, but if she relies solely on her looks to get by, she'll always remain under a man's thumb.”
Ma Jian

Edgar Cantero
“How confused they were when they saw how much I’d grown. Like, ‘Should we scorn her because she’s a kid? Or should we objectify her because she’s a woman? What kind of shit should we make her feel like?’ ”
Edgar Cantero, This Body's Not Big Enough for Both of Us

Jagdish Joghee
“Call it arrogance or male chauvinism, the male ego just doesn’t allow a woman to participate in key issues in family. Men seldom realize that it’s the housewife who has the most difficult job in the world: waking up early, preparing breakfast, getting the children ready for school, preparing lunch, cleaning up the mess at home and so much more. Even before they can some rest, the doorbell would ring and the children are back from school. Then, the routine again, and by the end of the day, they were tired. Women in the family are the last to sleep and the first to wake up. Sometimes, even during a crisis in the family or when there is a dispute, it’s the lady of the house that stands rock solid to calm things down and face challenges head on.”
Jagdish Joghee, The Colour of Love: Trumpets and bugles, there was music all over...

Malcolm X
“All women, by their nature, are fragile and weak: they are attracted to the male in whom they see strength.”
Malcolm X

Mokokoma Mokhonoana
“True women empowerment will occur only as a result, not of the disempowerment of men, but of the stopping of our caring about the kind of genitals a person has, except when it comes to things such as reproduction and the use of public toilets.”
Mokokoma Mokhonoana

Ray   Smith
“John never felt the insecurity that underlay the surfaces of most men, and in his mind, he could easily conjure up those male colleagues of hers. In the teachers’ lounge, in their stiff suits with their bow-tied collars, their nicotine-yellowed fingers holding up their pretentious pipes, eyeing Molly as she came in, then snickering when she went out, dismissing her not because she didn’t know enough but because she knew too much, indeed knew far more than they did, and they were cognizant of and frightened by this fact. Hence, the dismissal and, concomitantly, the figurative puffing out of their chests, like those of exotic birds whose impressive plumage hid the scrawny bodies beneath.”
Ray Smith, The Magnolia That Bloomed Unseen

Raheel Farooq
“Tolerating women is surprisingly easier than understanding them.”
Raheel Farooq