Women Won The Right To Vote 100 Years Ago. They Didn’t Start Voting Differently From Men Until 1980.

Women Won The Right To Vote 100 Years Ago. They Didn’t Start Voting Differently From Men Until 1980.

So what happened? Simply put, prior to 1980, it hadn’t been as clear which party was more naturally aligned with most women’s views on policy issues. But in that election cycle, the Republican Party took a sharp right turn on a number of issues that mattered to women, including issues like spending on the social safety net, the environment, and the role of government. (The GOP also opposed the Equal Rights Amendment for the first time that year in its party platform.) And while a majority of men, who had been increasingly drawn toward the Republicans as the Democrats grew more liberal on issues of race, ended up in Reagan’s column, a majority of women did not.

As the parties became more and more polarized over the next few decades, this gap grew larger too, as women and men’s political allegiances continued to drift apart. “The issues that women tend to care about have largely been embraced by the Democratic Party,” Cascio said.

‘Godzilla’ was a metaphor for Hiroshima, and Hollywood whitewashed it

‘Godzilla’ was a metaphor for Hiroshima, and Hollywood whitewashed it

This month is the 75th anniversary of the U.S. bombings in Hiroshima on Aug. 6 and Nagasaki three days later, and while many Americans today think of the film as an almost campy relic of its time, it was intended in Japan to be a metaphor for the ills of atomic testing and the use of nuclear weapons, considering what Japan endured after the bombings. The movie served as a strong political statement, representative of the traumas and anxieties of the Japanese people in an era when censorship was extensive in Japan because of the American occupation of the country after the war ended, Tsutsui said. The screen depicted what many could not explicitly say.

The History of Pyeonghwa Motors

A strong urge to have an automotive car-making industry led at the end of the 1990s to an interesting joint-venture between the North Korean state, represented by the ‘Ryongbong Company’ and the South Korean ‘Unification Church’ of Reverend Sun Myung Moon (known colloquially as ‘the Moonies’), represented by the ‘Tongil Group’.

The History of Pyeonghwa Motors – Part 1 (1999-2012).

The History of Pyeonghwa Motors – Part 2 (2012 – Present).

Related:

Pyeonghwa Motors Dealership | North Korea Travel Guide