From: owner-ammf-digest@smoe.org (alt.music.moxy-fruvous digest) To: ammf-digest@smoe.org Subject: alt.music.moxy-fruvous digest V14 #10160 Reply-To: ammf@fruvous.com Sender: owner-ammf-digest@smoe.org Errors-To: owner-ammf-digest@smoe.org Precedence: bulk alt.music.moxy-fruvous digest Wednesday, November 23 2022 Volume 14 : Number 10160 Today's Subjects: ----------------- Tinnitus: Hereās What Makes 70% of People Immune To Ear Ringing ["Steven"] 30 Seconds Will Reward You With $100 in Exclusive Red Lobster Rewards ["U] Gift Card! Email participants only. ["Amazing Deals" Subject: Tinnitus: Hereās What Makes 70% of People Immune To Ear Ringing Tinnitus: Herebs What Makes 70% of People Immune To Ear Ringing http://sonoblisz.shop/EHSkz9NaibCiNhPwxzWfqzFDA06Cln6fVQ-X4vLYojuVRMGhtw http://sonoblisz.shop/IUZZppN1oqZ-NMI6vmjEOP6NFgu3FRWbMJ9EiGTAK5U1XEczxQ akker-Nort took a leading role in preparing the International Woman Suffrage Alliance's actions for the 1930 League of Nations conference on international law. Women from 35 countries were present at the conference at the Peace Palace in the Hague, though they were not formally invited. The Alliance's main focus was nationality law, as, despite decades-long protests against laws that made married women automatically lose their nationality and take on their husbands, in many countries, little progress had been made towards achieving equality. The women staged protest marches, carrying their national flags and wearing dresses ranging from white (equality) to black (absolutely unequal). The different dress shades symbolically reflected the gap between the nationality law demanded by the Alliance and the law of the land they represented. Bakker-Nort said the black dresses of the Dutch women amidst colourful ones of other nations created a "rather painful situation" for the hosts and showed how far behind the Netherlands was, as its laws were "still based on the obsolete principle of subjection of women to men". The activists were able to get meetings with the League of Nations delegates but eventu ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 21 Nov 2022 04:50:07 -0500 From: "URGENT Notification" Subject: 30 Seconds Will Reward You With $100 in Exclusive Red Lobster Rewards 30 Seconds Will Reward You With $100 in Exclusive Red Lobster Rewards http://southbeaoch.shop/1tZITaW9mOMGwKCbESmVlVesn2rUM6GJl4KmyBtMrC__zYeX2g http://southbeaoch.shop/KUfaTTsxj8q5FjSw5W1CVPXbzx-DfTtHOwDxjxlDeQ0KP_56tw akker-Nort considered getting women the right to vote to be a principal means to achieve the overhaul of marriage law, a standard view among first wave feminists. She said that getting the vote was essential to make progress on women's issues and that it was a fundamental right for women to have a say in all matters. In 1917 Dutch women obtained the right to stand in elections (passive suffrage), though they could not vote (active suffrage). Bakker-Nort continued to campaign with the VVVK for active suffrage. The women's suffrage campaign was won in 1919, when the women's right to vote became law, instigated by the VDB's Henri Marchant. Once the VVVK had achieved its goal, it changed its name to Association of Women Citizens (VVS) and widened its scope to gain more rights for women. Bakker-Nort co-authored a report for the VVS outlining provisions she thought should be included in a modern marriage law and wrote in a column in its monthly magazine that the old laws, which made married women legally incapacitated, denied them any say over their children and property an ------------------------------ Date: Mon, 21 Nov 2022 02:24:30 -0500 From: "Amazing Deals" Subject: Gift Card! Email participants only. Gift Card! Email participants only. http://synogust.shop/zNF8pS24MREX6Lzwl4eFAemGlElSXgLK7fByEDZOgy9U6-H2Ag http://synogust.shop/19nXqONYLLNmTNgj_RvW0tKTR95cdqOdVDC20iqoRh_qUbSq4A t age 34, Bakker-Nort started studying law at the University of Groningen after realising that fighting for women's rights required a thorough understanding of the law. In the 1922 general election, the first in which women were allowed to vote, she was elected to parliament and became the VDB's first female representative. She was re-elected four times and, during her time in the chamber, mainly argued the case for more women's rights concerning marriage and labour law. She was also active internationally, taking a leading role in preparing the International Woman Suffrage Alliance's actions for the 1930 League of Nations conference on international law. In 1933, she acted as a judge in a counter-trial in London of the arson case of the Reichstag fire. After the German invasion of the Netherlan ------------------------------ End of alt.music.moxy-fruvous digest V14 #10160 ***********************************************