The Hetero-Patriarchy: Marriage Equality In The United States

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An amazing accomplishment happened on June 26, 2015 when marriage equality was legalized across the nation. Hearing this exciting news, I quickly celebrated, for I have urged for equal rights for all queer bodies (LGBT plus communities, minority races, and female bodies), which is my sole passion. I had first developed a strong opinion and passion about queer theory when I joined the debate team in 2012 and started debating over the topic; however, last year was the year I intensely debate this topic. It is amazing how far we’ve come to making progress in the queer movement: the movement that encompasses all minority bodies to end the depravity in society. Yet, it is also amazing how far we have to go to ensure true equality. From the 13th, 14th, and 19th amendment to modern day civil rights movements and marriage equality, we can track how far the United States of America has come to achieving equality. I believe one of the sole purposes of the United …show more content…

Although women have much more opportunities today than before, the hetero-patriarchy still persist. Statistics prove that for every dollar a white, heterosexual male makes a white, heterosexual woman will only make seventy-seven cents. And, that is only considering white, heterosexual women; a woman of another race and/or sexuality will make much less. Also, higher position jobs are much more difficult to obtain if you are a man than a woman because employers believe he has the ethos, or stamina, to do the job even if he is against a woman of the same or better credentials. But the working world isn’t just what makes society hetero-patriarchal. Violence against all beings—man, woman, non-human—and colonization, and dehumanization, and oppression, and massacre all stem from the hetero-patriarchy. I stand firmly against this and through debate and bettering my future I stand against all aspects that attack the queer

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