If women have young children, they are one man away from welfare.
— Gloria Steinem
Like art, revolutions come from combining what exists into what has never existed before.
If the shoe doesn't fit, must we change the foot?
The first problem for all of us, men and women, is not to learn, but to unlearn.
America is an enormous frosted cupcake in the middle of millions of starving people.
Men should think twice before making widow hood woman's only path to power.
Happy or unhappy, families are all mysterious. We have only to imagine how differently we would be described - and will be, after our deaths - by each of the family members who believe they know us.
We need to remember across generations that there is as much to learn as there is to teach.
Power can be taken, but not given. The process of the taking is empowerment in itself.
Most women's magazines simply try to mold women into bigger and better consumers.
It is more rewarding to watch money change the world than watch it accumulate.
I'd like to be played as a child by Natalie Wood. I'd have some romantic scenes as Audrey Hepburn and have gritty black-and-white scenes as Patricia Neal.
A woman reading Playboy feels a little like a Jew reading a Nazi manual.
Logic is in the eye of the logician.
Some of us are becoming the men we wanted to marry.
Childbirth is more admirable than conquest, more amazing than self-defense, and as courageous as either one.
In my own mind, I am still a fat brunette from Toledo, and I always will be.
Clearly no one knows what leadership has gone undiscovered in women of all races, and in black and other minority men.
The first resistance to social change is to say it's not necessary.
If women are supposed to be less rational and more emotional at the beginning of our menstrual cycle when the female hormone is at its lowest level, then why isn't it logical to say that, in those few days, women behave the most like the way men behave all month long?
For much of the female half of the world, food is the first signal of our inferiority. It lets us know that our own families may consider female bodies to be less deserving, less needy, less valuable.
The only thing I can't stand is discomfort.
We'll never solve the feminization of power until we solve the masculinity of wealth.
A pedestal is as much a prison as any small, confined space.
From pacifist to terrorist, each person condemns violence - and then adds one cherished case in which it may be justified.
Without leaps of imagination, or dreaming, we lose the excitement of possibilities. Dreaming, after all, is a form of planning.
What has the women's movement learned from Geraldine Ferraro's candidacy for vice president? Never get married.
Most women are one man away from welfare.
A woman without a man is like a fish without a bicycle.
God may be in the details, but the goddess is in the questions. Once we begin to ask them, there's no turning back.
Most American children suffer too much mother and too little father.
The authority of any governing institution must stop at its citizen's skin.
We've begun to raise daughters more like sons... but few have the courage to raise our sons more like our daughters.
Any woman who chooses to behave like a full human being should be warned that the armies of the status quo will treat her as something of a dirty joke. That's their natural and first weapon. She will need her sisterhood.
A liberated woman is one who has sex before marriage and a job after.
Hope is a very unruly emotion.
It's an incredible con job when you think about it, to believe something now in exchange for something after death. Even corporations with their reward systems don't try to make it posthumous.
I have yet to hear a man ask for advice on how to combine marriage and a career.
Law and justice are not always the same.
Writing is the only thing that, when I do it, I don't feel I should be doing something else.
We can tell our values by looking at our checkbook stubs.
I've yet to be on a campus where most women weren't worrying about some aspect of combining marriage, children, and a career. I've yet to find one where many men were worrying about the same thing.
No man can call himself liberal, or radical, or even a conservative advocate of fair play, if his work depends in any way on the unpaid or underpaid labor of women at home, or in the office.