Stella+K.+Stanton+B

Women and slaves have are just as equal as men. Are humans are equal. 
 * __Elizabeth Cady Stanton__ **
 * Philosophy :**

===  (Hello please introduce yourself) For most of my life time I was fighting for women’s right and that all humans are equal. I was educated better than ** other women during my time. I had studied law under my father, who was a lawyer.I was really supportive of women’s right and had organized Women's RightsConvention at Seneca Falls. Later I had organized American Equal Rights Associatio n with some of my fellow companions. (Explain to us about your philosophy) You see humans are born in the same way, created in the same way maybe raised in the same way. We all eat, sleep and work to live. We all breath the same air, see and touch the same things.I don’t see why there’s any reason for the same human being to be discriminated. Maybe the color of our skin or the appearance of our gender appear different but does that really matter? We all need protection and have the same rights like white-men. Us women and africans shouldn’t be tools for the needs of white-men. Instead we should get the equal rights. Some of us women are actually helpful in society. (Explain how your philosophy had influence the industrial revolution) The industrial revolution started in the  18th     and early 19th centuries. I was born in 1815. The industrial revolution had women working in factories but were paid less than men. How can that be I mean we have every right    to get paid equally or even more than the men. We work just as hard as them, us women go to work, have break, and end work at the same time as men. What’s the difference?  Do we produce products that aren’t useful? Do men not use the products we made? We are all human beings we should all be someone that should be respected.  There is no difference between sex and race but just the fact that we appear different. ** ===   **Video:** media type="youtube" key="qGlJ5ewduZM" height="344" width="425" **Resources** **Primary :** 1. The present social, civil and religious condition of women is a subject too vast to be brought within the limits of one short lecture. Suffice it to say for the present, that wherever we turn the history of woman is sad and drear and dark, without any alleviating circumstances, nothing from which we can draw consolation. As the nations of the earth emerge from a state of barbarism, the sphere of woman gradually becomes wider but not even under what is thought to be the full blaze of the sun of civilization is it what God designed it to be. In every country and clime does man assume the responsibility of marking out the path for her to tread,—in every country does he regard her as a being inferior to himself and one whom he is to guide and controul. From the Arabian Kerek whose wife is obliged to steal from her Husband to supply the necessities of life,—from the Mahometan who forbids pigs dogs women and other impure animals to enter a mosque, and does not allow a fool, madman or women to proclaim the hour of prayer,—from the German who complacently smokes his meerschaum while his wife, yoked with the ox draws the plough through its furrow,—from the delectable gentleman who thinks an inferior style of conversation adapted to women—to the legislator who considers her incapable of saying what laws shall govern her, is this same feeling manifested.[|3] In all eastern countries she is a mere slave bought and sold at pleasure. There are many differences in habits, manners, and customs, among the heathen nations of the old world, but there is little change for the better in woman's lot—she is either the drudge of man to perform all the hard labour of the field and the menial duties of the hut, tent, or house, or she is the idol of his lust the mere creature of his ever varying whims and will. Truly has she herself said in her best estate, 2.—did I not feel that the time had fully come for the question of woman's wrongs to be laid before the public—did I not believe that woman herself must do this work—for woman alone can understand the height and the depth, the length and the breadth of her own degradation and woe. Man cannot speak for us—because he has been educated to believe that we differ from him so materially, that he cannot judge of our thoughts, feelings and opinions by his own. Moral beings can only judge of others by themselves—the moment they give a different nature to any of their own kind they utterly fail.    **"Address by Elizabeth Cady Stanton on Woman's Rights, page 1:."**  __**Home Page: Stanton and Anthony Papers Online**__**. 8 Dec. 2008 <**[|**http://ecssba.rutgersedu/docs/ecswoman1.html**]**>.**   3." Because man and woman are the complement of one another, we need woman's thought in national affairs to make a safe and stable government."  "We hold these truths to be self-evident: that all men and women are created equal."   "The prejudice against color, of which we hear so much, is no stronger than that against sex. It is produced by the same cause, and manifested very much in the same way.   <span style="color: rgb(51, 51, 51);">  he negro's skin and the woman's sex are both prima facie evidence that they were intended to be in subjection to the white Saxon man.
 * Script:**

**"Elizabeth Cady Stanton Quotes."** __**Women's History - Comprehensive Women's History Research Guide**__ **. 7 Dec. 2008 <**[|**__http://womenshistory.about.com/cs/quotes/a/ec_stanton.htm__**]**>.**

<span class="Apple-style-span" style="color: rgb(0, 0, 0); font-size: 11px; line-height: normal;"> **Secondary:** "Elizabeth Cady Stanton." __Spartacus Educational - Home Page__. 4 Dec. 2008 <[|__http://www.spartacus.schoolnet.co.uk/USAWstanton.htm__]>. **Questions** 1. Why do you think Elizabeth Cady Stanton fought for the slaves right during this time? How had the slaves affected the industrial Revolution? 2. How would Stanton’s philosophy fit into the Industrial Revolution? 3. Compare the conditions of how women and slaves were treated at this time. Who were treated worse? 4. Why does she think that men cannot speak for women? Do you believe the same thing too? 5. How did her philosophy affect today's society?