They decided to break that silence.
***
More than 70 percent of hotel housekeepers in the United States are women. Their labor is the backbone of an industry that markets comfort but often denies dignity to those who create it. At Sonesta Select Austin North, the women who knew every hallway, every cart and every stain were treated as if they were disposable. What they experienced is a common issue when those doing the hardest work have the least power.
(This essay is part of a collection presented by Ms. and the Groundswell Fund highlighting the work of Groundswell partners advancing inclusive democracy.)
The post Disrupting Intimidation: How Texas Hotel Workers Are Shaking Up the Industry appeared first on Ms. Magazine.
]]>Project 2026 lays out a government redesigned to control women’s bodies, erase LGBTQ+ lives, dismantle civil rights protections and roll back decades of hard-won progress. Wrapped in the language of “family,” “sovereignty” and “restoring America,” it is a direct attempt to impose a narrow, rigid ideology on an entire nation.
Make no mistake: This is a plan for forced motherhood, government-policed gender and the end of women’s equality as we know it.
But Project 2026 is not destiny. It is a warning—and one we must answer with the full force of a movement that has never accepted a future written for us by someone else.
The post Project 2026 Declares Open War on Women’s Rights appeared first on Ms. Magazine.
]]>The post They Came for Nurses. What They’re Really Coming for Is Women’s Power—and Your Healthcare appeared first on Ms. Magazine.
]]>People across industries—artists, founders, caregivers, cultural influencers, nurses, educators, nonprofit leaders, small business owners and parents—can give the country an unfiltered look at why they step away from work, and what it costs to do so without paid leave.
OOO replies range from clever to catastrophic. Some name the person they are caring for; others reveal the exhaustion of trying to do it all. All together, they show a country exerting caring in every direction and a policy landscape that hasn’t caught up.
Among those making the rounds:
—"I'm OOO because inexplicably school ends at 3 and work ends at 5 at best. ... I can't keep up, I need sleep, I'm getting a cold, everything is expensive and unnecessarily hard, and the holidays are coming."
—"I'm OOO because my parents are getting older and I can’t manage their RX and 500 unread emails at once. In-home care is $60K and I have limited PTO. WiIl get back to you ASAP!"
—“Hi, sorry to miss you! I’m OOO because I just gave birth, but like 1 in 4 women in the U.S. I’ll be back at work in a couple weeks.”
The post Are We Ever Off Work, or Just Out of Office? The OOO Messages Exposing America’s Care Crisis appeared first on Ms. Magazine.
]]>Nicole is a single mother working two jobs. She was a part of the first round of Magnolia Mother’s Trust (MMT), where she received one year of guaranteed income. MMT has helped more than 500 mothers since it began in 2018.
"My ideal future is one where we aren’t living paycheck to paycheck—where I can pay all our bills, provide stability, and even take a trip on the weekends for fun, just to enjoy life together. I want more for Kylie and me."
The post ‘I’m Working Just to Survive’: A Single Mom on SNAP Cuts, Two Jobs and Big Dreams appeared first on Ms. Magazine.
]]>But politicians and activists who oppose what they call “woke gender ideology,” are galvanized and doubling down, using this Texas A&M case to push for curricular reviews aimed at eliminating women’s, gender and sexuality studies from public colleges and universities across Texas.
Framed as bureaucratic oversight, conservatives seek to eliminate gender studies and related fields through procedural mechanisms that evade public scrutiny. The assaults on gender studies in Texas are not just a local issue; they are a national bellwether. They signal a coordinated effect to dismantle feminist and queer inquiry and remind us that silence, in the face of repression, is complicity.
The post The Politics of ‘Audit’: How Texas Is Using Bureaucracy to Erase Gender Studies appeared first on Ms. Magazine.
]]>This week:
—No Kings Day marks the largest single-day protest in American history.
—The ongoing government shutdown could soon disrupt SNAP benefits, another unprecedented moment in U.S. history. “We have never seen our government turn on its people this way," said Abby Leibman, president and CEO of MAZON.
—House Democrats rebuke Pete Hegseth's hostility towards women in the military.
—Speaker Mike Johnson refuses to swear in newly elected Democrat, Rep. Adelita Grijalva.
—Return-to-office policies are pushing women out of the workforce.
—Remembering legendary trans activist Miss Major Griffin-Gracy.
—The Supreme Court heard arguments challenging the Voting Rights Act.
… and more.
The post Keeping Score: No Kings Protest Turnout Makes History; SCOTUS Threatens Voting Rights; Gen Z Women Are Most Liberal in U.S. appeared first on Ms. Magazine.
]]>Therapist and founder of Brown Girl Therapy, Sahaj Kohli has spent years studying this phenomenon. Through a book, a podcast and a mental health community for bicultural and immigrant women, she's helping these women understand "your voice doesn't have to be angry or loud in order for it to be brave. It just has to be yours."
As we celebrate Diwali—a festival that honors light’s triumph over darkness—it’s worth remembering that our voices are part of that light. Choosing to speak, even when it’s uncomfortable, is how we brighten the path for those who come after us.
The post Sahaj Kohli Is Helping Immigrant Daughters Break the Silence They Inherited appeared first on Ms. Magazine.
]]>When hope wavers and progress stalls, I look for words that steady me. Recently, I found them in writer Roxane Gay’s powerful essay in The New York Times, "Civility Is a Fantasy," where she writes: "As a writer, as a person, I do not know how to live and write and thrive in a world where working for decency and fairness and equality can be seen as incivility … I worry and I worry and I worry, and I feel helpless and angry and tired, but also recognize that doing nothing is not an acceptable choice."
After reading Gay’s words, I reminded myself of the girl I am and the change I lead, and thought about the many girls who might be feeling that same helplessness right now—those watching rights roll back, hearing their worth debated or wondering if their voices still matter. So, on International Day of the Girl, this letter is for them. It’s a call for action.
The post This International Day of the Girl, ‘Doing Nothing Is Not an Acceptable Choice’ appeared first on Ms. Magazine.
]]>But history reminds us that these attacks are not signs of our weakness—they are signs of our progress. The louder the backlash, the clearer it is that our words and actions are reshaping the world.
Beneath every battle lies a deeper truth: Without explicit constitutional equality, no right we’ve won is truly safe—not reproductive freedom, not equal pay, not protection from violence. That’s why so many continue to press for recognition of the Equal Rights Amendment as the 28th Amendment to the Constitution. With 38 states already ratified and constitutional scholars confirming the legal foundation is there, what remains is political will—and in this moment, the outcome may be decided in the very districts and states where women’s votes will soon be cast.
The post Strong Women, Loud Backlash. We’re Ready. appeared first on Ms. Magazine.
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