This perspective of women is …show more content…
Anthony, Elizabeth Cady Stanton, and lastly Lucy Stone, fought for the establishment of women’s rights. The first wave exemplified how women had fought and kept their courage through torture and even gave their lives for other women to able to vote today along with men. The second wave of feminism started in the 1960s and the third wave began in the early 1990s. The problem within modern feminism is there is no progressive movement, federal law needs to be improved, social norms needs to be improve, and a fair protection of all women with different …show more content…
Feminism is not a local movement, but instead, feminism is an international movement. Many citizens are not aware of how women’s rights are far more progressive towards equality within other countries compare to the United States, therefore, demonstrating the United States is truly in a culture lag. This being said, the negative concept towards feminism in the United States is focusing more on a local microscopic than the macroscopic of feminism as a global movement. The movement of the nation needs to be more productive in representing these issues and educating citizens correctly about feminism. The multiple causes of the problem are white men who still dominate the nation, an ineffective current movement of feminism, uneducated citizens of what the federal law truly protects, and social norms. As a result, women, men, and younger generations are affected by this problem because it displays a natural gender schema, in which predicts and supplies the lenses and the belief of the citizens of the United States (Maianu). These are the uncertainties within modern feminism and is not just a controversial issue roaming across the