International Womens Day (Full Version)

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ArgentaElite -> International Womens Day (3/8/2012 1:42:21 AM)

Today is International Womens Day......I think there should be an International Domme Day!

Oh you can tell I am quite bored at this time in the morning! :D[:D]




sunshinemiss -> RE: International Womens Day (3/8/2012 3:12:21 AM)

Yep, we celebrated.  It was a goooooooooood day!




ashjor911 -> RE: International Womens Day (3/8/2012 7:22:35 AM)

Yaaay




DarkSteven -> RE: International Womens Day (3/8/2012 9:53:41 AM)

International Women's Day? Cool! I'll take two of 'em!




ashjor911 -> RE: International Womens Day (3/8/2012 10:32:20 AM)

its not a Sale Day..... WTF?

*angrey face at DS*




Lockit -> RE: International Womens Day (3/8/2012 10:42:28 AM)

It's sad that in many countries, women in oppression and abuse, cannot celebrate being a woman. It's sad that even in countries where we are freer, we still have idiots running around thinking women are more like sexual cattle. It's sad that we still have stonings, places where it is okay to kill or sexually maim a female of any age and cover ups of such and so many fail to do one damn thing about it. It's sad we have a day of celebration that many cannot take part in, but then, would they wish to celebrate or get the fuck out of what they must live with?

Where equal pay and education can sometimes be found... we have no real idea of what our sisters in womanhood are still going through.

I will spend some time reading about women such as these, as I have for many years and watching the stoning of Soraya, a great example of how awful it is for some and how easy some of us have it. And again, I will try to figure out in some small way, what I can do about it and although that may not be much... I will never forget or stop trying to remind people... that there are others out there, not able to even express what I just have.




MrBukani -> RE: International Womens Day (3/8/2012 12:37:26 PM)

Women would rule the world better cause they dont shit in their own kitchen.[:D]




PoisonIvy88 -> RE: International Womens Day (3/9/2012 12:38:13 PM)

I agree.  Let's create a Domme day! :D




Kainundeva -> RE: International Womens Day (3/9/2012 2:42:50 PM)

rename sunday dommeday. sun is not always shining. dommeday makes more sense. worship big dominatrix.
and that big dominatrix in the sky concept puts a completely new meaning to rain. and think of praying for rain to the BD.
ahhh, its late now over here, i take my wife and go to sleep.




kalikshama -> RE: International Womens Day (3/9/2012 3:49:15 PM)

International Women's Day 2012: Advancing Women's Health

Susan Blumenthal, M.D.

Public Health Editor at HuffPost and Former U.S. Assistant Surgeon General

Written in Collaboration with Jean Guo

With 3.4 billion women worldwide, women's health is a global issue today. Yet, societal and environmental factors including poverty, discrimination, and violence are undermining the advancement of women's health. For example, more than two-thirds of the world's refugees are women and children, and gender-based violence causes more deaths and disability among women aged 15 to 44 than cancer, malaria, and traffic accidents combined.

The health status of women is linked to their fundamental freedoms and empowerment. Education and occupational opportunities as well as access to health care are crucial components for building a healthier future for women worldwide. In many countries, however, the denial of women's basic rights negatively impacts their health and the trajectory of their lives. For example, women are deprived of an education in many nations. Globally, two-thirds of the people who are illiterate are women, and 41 million girls are denied access to a primary education.

Furthermore, complications of pregnancy and childbirth are the leading causes of death worldwide for women between the ages of 15 and 19. Every day, an estimated 1,600 women die from preventable complications during pregnancy or childbirth, and 99 percent of maternal mortality occurs in the developing world.

In many developing nations, women are experiencing the burden of both infectious and chronic diseases. Female life expectancy has declined dramatically in sub-Saharan Africa as a result of HIV/AIDS. Today, women account for more than half of those suffering from the disease. Globally, young women are 1.6 times more likely to be living with HIV/AIDS than young men.

Additionally, the prevalence of chronic diseases including heart disease, cancer, diabetes and Alzheimer's disease has increased dramatically worldwide over the past several decades. Non-communicable diseases cause more than 60 percent of deaths worldwide today. The number of people over the age of 60 is expected to reach 1 billion by 2020 and almost 2 billion by 2050, with women constituting a majority of the population. In the U.S., women over the age of 65 are predicted to represent 20 percent of the country's population by 2050. Therefore, the promotion of healthy aging must be a top priority in America and worldwide.

Improving women's health is critical for humanitarian, economic, and national security reasons. The spread of infectious diseases including AIDS and TB and epidemics like obesity and tobacco consumption do not stop at national borders. Yet while health concerns cross borders, so do solutions. Today, we have the science and technology to eradicate preventable disease but we now need the commitment, funding and political will to accomplish this goal. That is why the work of PEPFAR (a lifesaving program of the U.S. Department of State), initiatives of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, and the work of private foundations have been vital in developing effective interventions and supporting international health programs that address a range of global health threats to women. Improving surveillance of disease, advancing scientific research, strengthening health systems, increasing awareness of cultural issues, and emphasizing disease prevention, and promoting early detection and treatment are the cornerstones of ensuring a healthier future for women worldwide.

President Obama's Global Health Initiative addresses many critical health challenges including HIV/AIDS, TB, reproductive health, malaria, global hunger and food insecurity, with a special focus on women and girls. The U.S. Department of State, with the leadership and commitment of Secretary Hillary Rodham Clinton and the U.S. Agency for International Development, has directed much of their attention to issues that impact women and girls. Girls' education comprises 67 percent of USAID's education initiatives, and women receive more than 60 percent of loans from USAID-supported microfinance institutions. Just last week, the USAID launched its new Gender Equality and Female Empowerment Policy in the recognition that long-term sustainable development will only be possible when women and men are given equal opportunity to realize their potential. Next week, Secretary Clinton will release the first State Department policy on gender to integrate these perspectives into the fabric of U.S. foreign policy.

While on this International Women's Day we mark the progress that has been made with the establishment of many innovative initiatives to improve the lives of women and girls worldwide, we must continue to focus on the challenges that remain. Only by ensuring that women's rights and women's health are essential elements of development can there be a path forward toward global progress and a better future for all in the years ahead.




kalikshama -> RE: International Womens Day (3/9/2012 3:53:20 PM)

Democratic Senators Ask John Boehner Not To Introduce Blunt Amendment In House

In a "hail mary" pass on International Women's Day, all 12 Democratic women in the Senate sent a letter to House Speaker John Boehner (R-Ohio) asking him to abandon his plans to continue the Senate GOP's recent fight against contraception coverage in the House.

"We are asking that you abandon the promise you have made to bring legislation to the House floor similar to the Blunt amendment, which was defeated in the Senate last week, and which would turn the clock back on women's access to health care," the senators, led by Sen. Patty Murray (D-Wash.), wrote. "At a time when 99 percent of sexually active women in the U.S. have used birth control, its role in the lives of women and their families is hard to understate. ... That is why the recent Republican attacks on birth control access have been so eye-opening for American women. For most American women, the battle over contraception was settled a half century ago."

After the Senate last week voted down Sen. Roy Blunt's (R-Mo.) amendment, which would have allowed any employer with moral objections to opt out of covering birth control or any other kind of health service, Boehner vowed to continue the fight in the House.

"I think it's important for us to win this issue," he said. "And there are a lot of ways to do that. There's one in the Senate. We have a couple in the House. It's matter of how we proceed."

Legislation has already been introduced in the House that would roll back the Obama administration's new contraception rule requiring most employers to cover birth control with no co-pay for their employees. Rep. Jeff Fortenberry's (R-Neb.) Respect for Rights of Conscience Act, the companion bill to the Blunt Amendment, already has 220 cosponsors.

But the GOP's attempts to limit women's birth control coverage are not going over well with voters. According to a new poll by EMILY's List, 60 percent of voters oppose the Blunt Amendment. Nearly half of respondents, including 40 percent of Republicans asked, said they would be less likely to vote for a candidate if he or she supported the Blunt Amendment.

"Women have had enough," the Democratic women wrote in the letter. "As we have heard from countless women in our home states and here on Capitol Hill, they are tired of being targets for a political strategy that endangers their health care and they want it to stop. We hope that you can answer their calls, and ours. It's time for you to put an end to the attacks on women's health care and to work with the Senate to get back to the American people's top priority: creating jobs and boosting our economy."




LookieNoNookie -> RE: International Womens Day (3/9/2012 7:28:15 PM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: ArgentaElite

Today is International Womens Day......I think there should be an International Domme Day!

Oh you can tell I am quite bored at this time in the morning! :D[:D]


More proof of pandering to women.

(Women own everything.....posing another day to their interests is just pure pandering).

There's no "Men's" day.

(We have Fathers day....that's it. Valentines day is for wimmens....Mothers day....wimmens.....there's a dozen other days that are all about wimmens....why? Because it sells. Why? Guilt).

There's also no all White College.

How come?

(Sorry.....error.....that would be racist).

And let me add just one more thing.....(said in the most submissive of ways, natch).....

It's JUST as easy to put the toilet seat UP......as it is to put it down.

(Why the hell don't you girls put the seat UP when you're done?)








StrayCatCharlie -> RE: International Womens Day (3/10/2012 1:59:56 AM)

All true, Mr. NoNookie, but, you should keep those sorts of opinions under you hat. Otherwise, small chance of nookie for you, dude.

Sad but true. No ?




MissKittyDeVine -> RE: International Womens Day (3/10/2012 3:32:18 AM)

Every day is Domme Day.




kalikshama -> RE: International Womens Day (3/10/2012 7:51:56 AM)

Colombia yesterday:

[image]http://www.tera.ca/Images/Colombia.jpg[/image]




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