F-Sex

   Mission Statement   

A weekly discussion space about sexuality. Located in Rhode Island and open to anyone over 18!
For more info, check our Mission Statement.

"Imperial democracy mainstreams women’s rights discourse into foreign policy and militarises women for imperial goals."
 Zillah Eisenstein (via mehreenkasana)
— 11 months ago with 23 notes
liberated-soul:

anarkalilove:

‘bani thani’, a recreation of the mona lisa by rajasthani artist gopal swami khetanchi

This is brilliant.

liberated-soul:

anarkalilove:

‘bani thani’, a recreation of the mona lisa by rajasthani artist gopal swami khetanchi

This is brilliant.

(via zuky)

— 11 months ago with 1568 notes
"Power works best when you don’t have to use a whip."
My Race at the End of the 20th Century teacher said this to explain why racism is continually effective as a means of control. (via iamabutchsolo)

(Source: daughterofmulan)

— 11 months ago with 8 notes
"Women are socialized to make men feel good. We’re socialized to “let you down easy.” We’re not socialized to say a clear and direct “no.” We’re socialized to speak in hints and boost egos and let people save face. People who don’t respect the social contract (rapists, predators, assholes, pickup artists) are good at taking advantage of this. “No” is something we have to learn. “No” is something we have to earn. In fact, I’d argue that the ability to just say “no” to something, without further comment, apology, explanation, guilt, or thinking about it is one of the great rites of passage in growing up, and when you start saying it and saying it regularly the world often pushes back. And calls you names."
— 11 months ago with 26893 notes
#Quotes 
"the fact that “love your body” rhetoric shifts the responsibility for body acceptance over to the individual, and away from communities, institutions, and power, is also problematic. individuals who do not love their bodies, who find their bodies difficult to love, are seen as being part of the problem. the underlying assumption is that if we all loved our bodies just as they are, our fat-shaming, beauty-policing culture would be different. if we don’t love our bodies, we are, in effect, perpetuating normative (read: impossible) beauty standards. if we don’t love our individual bodies, we are at fault for collectively continuing the oppressive and misogynistic culture. if you don’t love your body, you’re not trying hard enough to love it. in this framework, your body is still the paramount focus, and one way or another, you’re failing. it’s too close to the usual body-shaming, self-policing crap, albeit with a few quasi-feminist twists, for comfort."
— 11 months ago with 6310 notes