For my final entry of the year, we thought it worthwhile to offer a snapshot—a year’s worth of reporting on the depth of damage this administration has wreaked on women’s health, with real-time Contrarian reporting noted.
The post A Very Bad Year for Women’s Health appeared first on Ms. Magazine.
]]>As an emergency medicine physician with over 20 years of experience, I’ve operated from positions of information and authority in mass casualties before. This weekend, I had neither. I was simply a mother trying to keep my daughter safe from 150 miles away, armed only with a phone and whatever guidance I could piece together. I want to share what I learned, because on Saturday, thousands of students were in lockdown texting their anxious parents, and I realized how unprepared we are for this side of the experience.
The post My Daughter Was in the Mass Shooting at Brown, and I Wasn’t Trained for What to Do appeared first on Ms. Magazine.
]]>Both are student-run publications housed at the University of Alabama. And on any other day, they would make one think the future of journalism look very bright indeed. Except that the sole reason I found these magazines at all is because they are now officially suspended. Last week, campus officials announced their permanent shuttering. Yet another casualty of the Trump administration’s attacks on free speech and public higher education—all in the name of stamping out supposed diversity, equity and inclusion.
The post Trump’s Anti-Diversity Crusade Claims Two Campus Magazines appeared first on Ms. Magazine.
]]>We recognized The Contrarian’s Jennifer Rubin and Norm Eisen for building an independent media platform willing to call out authoritarianism plainly; Democracy Forward president and CEO Skye Perryman for her organization’s record-breaking wave of legal challenges against the Trump administration; and the creative team behind the Broadway hit Liberation—playwright Bess Wohl, director Whitney White, and former Ms. writer and editor Lisa Cronin Wohl—for reminding audiences that storytelling is itself a democratic act.
"The number one tool that autocratic actors use to try to consolidate power and take away power from the people, is to convince people that they have no power," said Perryman. "Their toolbox is one of isolation. They want you to feel alone."
"I grew up miles from here, family hamburger stand," said Eisen, "and now to be here, to have this opportunity with my colleagues to fight for this democracy that took my country, and my parents. ... When my mother was living, she loved to say the Nazis took us out of Czechoslovakia on cattle cars, and my son flew back on Air Force One. So, how can I not be hopeful?"
The post The Ms. Q&A With Democracy Defenders Norm Eisen, Skye Perryman and Jennifer Rubin 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.
]]>But, unfortunately for them: The resistance has also been everywhere all at once, too.
There is no doubt that when historians look back on this sordid moment in history, they will conclude that it was women, and feminists, who led the way out of it.
The post The Resistance Is Everywhere appeared first on Ms. Magazine.
]]>The post Feminists vs. Authoritarians: Honoring Leaders Holding the Line appeared first on Ms. Magazine.
]]>As the political pundits do their thing across the airwaves, here is yet another hot take on it all—feminist style.
The post A Brighter Day in the United States: Feminist Lessons from Election 2025 appeared first on Ms. Magazine.
]]>The post Trump Administration Forced to Fund SNAP Benefits—But Only Enough to Cover Half of November appeared first on Ms. Magazine.
]]>There is, in fact, an alternative to the Trump plan: The Right to IVF Act, introduced by Sen. Tammy Duckworth, would require employer-sponsored health plans and public health insurance, including Medicaid and military plans, to cover treatments. The bill also addresses discrimination and forbids the restriction of access to IVF based on marital status or sexual orientation.
Republicans have voted it down twice.
The post Trump’s IVF Announcement Fails Families—But Duckworth’s Right to IVF Act Could Deliver appeared first on Ms. Magazine.
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