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pegothejerk t1_ixfidh6 wrote

Fun fact - there were women who could vote before women's suffrage and the 19th was passed, but they were granted that ability from inheriting large estates and sociatal standings, and those women almost never wanted women in general to get the right to vote because they feared changing society would cause them to lose their standing in society and their comforts at home. Women like that were also largely responsible for fighting against women's suffrage, just as there are minorities and women today voting with conservatives against their own interests.

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Deyln t1_ixfn0ep wrote

And estate and inheritance is also one of the larger factors for the definition and adoption of the concept of gender.

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GozerDGozerian t1_ixgsp2k wrote

Can you explain this a bit more?

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D00M_H4MM3R t1_ixhsp7d wrote

The words “inheritance” and “estate” are not used in that article. It is indeed quite lengthy, but has nothing to do with the point you made above.

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InsuranceToTheRescue t1_ixhloi9 wrote

I believe it also depended on the time and place. Like, Wyoming almost passed on becoming a state because Congress was against them having universal suffrage in their state constitution; they put it in anyways. New Jersey had women's suffrage based on the same criteria as men, needing to own X amount in cash or property, but that was taken away in 1807.

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