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marymary1975
Guest
What we are talking here is about the feminist movement which is a movement that promotes abortion, contraception, sex before marriage, homosexuality, transgenderism, is anti-family and believes that being male or female are social constructions, that there are no differences between the sexes and is heavily against the catholic church which according to them is an oppresor of women. St. Joan of Arc never promoted any of the above-listed. As i said, is mutually exclusive with Catholicism because the Catholic church has expressly condemned abortion, homosexuality, etc, so unless someone is one of those people who called themselves catholic but don’t believe in half of the church’s teaching (which to me are not real catholics) it is impossible to be both. I am a lawyer too and can combine perfectly parenting, home and work but since I am catholic and don’t agree with abortion, homosexuality, contraception,etc. and follow the church doctrine (which I am quite knowleadgeable) therefore believe in real equality, as Jesus Christ intended, can say quite confidently that both are pretty much exclusive.Excuse me - I read a bumper sticker once that said ‘anyone who believes that women deserve better than to be treated like a small deposit of seagull poo on the windscreen of life is a feminist’.
Since I presume you fall into that category, I guess you are indeed a feminist. It simply depends on your definition/understanding of what feminism is.
Now when I was very young, before I’d even heard the f word, I knew of women such as Elizabeth I and St Joan of Arc who did not fit the traditional mould whereby women were expected to marry or enter religious life if they were to have any status or impact. As well as women such as my mother and grandmother who combined well very active and involved parenting with demanding and satisfying work (in Mum’s case as a doctor) which contributed greatly to their communities.
I didn’t need to know the f word to be an f word, neither did they.