Top 10 old school cartoons
1. fraggle rock
2. ninja turtles
3. scooby-doo
4. thunder cats
5. inspector gadget
6. rescue rangers
7. transformers
8. beetlejuice
9. care bears
10. captin planet
Top 10 old school cartoons
Women who are feminists hesitate to admit that they are one because they are afraid of what others will think about them. Stereotypiclly feminsits are viewed as being bossy, demanding, and extremly opinionated. With those qualities who would want to freely admit that they are in fact a feminist? People tend to hesitate the label feminist because women in America in the past traditionaly were viewed as being the weaker sex, not being involved in politics, and for being very opinionated. Now women are speaking up and are becoming loud political voices. Even though there are few women being heard/speaking out right now, I think more and more women will gain the confidence to become involved in politics and voice their opinions. Then feminists will become more accepted, not as being a loud bossy female but as a female who wants to be treaded equally and have her opinions heard and actually taken into account.
Ann Althouse has a degree from New York University Shool of Law and University of Michigan. She clerked for the Honorable Leonard B. Sand in the Southern District of New York and practiced law in the litigation depatment at Sullivan and Cromwell. She is now a proffesor of law at the University of Wisconsin. her blog web site is althouse.blogspot.com and from reading the comments it seem that there is a huge diversity of readers, both democrats and republicans. She refers to herslef as being a moderate, but to me she seems to be leaning towards the right. In her article, "Separated at the Bench," her argumentative purpose is to gain support for Smauel Alito to relpace Sandra Day O'Connor's seat in the Supreme Court for the liberals because he is most qualifed. To do this she starts off by stating examples of thought to be conservativ justices and then turning into liberal justices. She also talks about some of Alito's past decisions, "Both decisions display sensitivity to the needs of adherents of minority religions..." She said this because since O'Connor's vote was usually the determing factor, democrats would be happy to know not all of Alito's decisions are conservative. Common grounds that Althouse uses in the article is that someone who is best qualified for the job shoud get it. She also admits that more often than not Alito will vote conservatively rather than liberally, but he is not a strict constructionist.