Argumentative Essay On Women's Suffrage

Words: 456
Pages: 2

Women are people just like men are. Here in 1860, very few men seem to be aware of this concept. They don’t want women to have the same rights they do. Women can’t vote, they have to work very hard in service jobs and factories in horrible conditions where they get paid next to nothing, they have no rights to protest their terrible circumstances, they cannot inherit property, and in many places they can’t even go outside without their husband’s permission. I just can’t understand why so many men don’t realize how wrong this is. Women should have the same rights as men, they should be able to vote, they should be able to work for fair living wages equal to a man’s, and they should be able to collectively demand that their conditions at home, work, and society be improved. They need to be able to work at any profession of their choosing. Women can be authors, scientists, musicians, soldiers, police, doctors, lawyers, Congresspersons, Senators, and even the President of the United States if they want to, just as well as a man could.
For the last 50 years, many women have been struggling diligently to achieve their rights. Elizabeth Cady Stanton and a group of Quaker women organized the first meeting dedicated to pursuing
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As Thomas Jefferson stated in the Declaration of Independence, rights aren’t something that are given to people. They are God given. Women’s rights are something that they naturally have, and can only taken away by our society. It is not that these rights must be granted to women. It is that these rights that were stolen away must now be returned to women. Society will not suffer the way many people envision, if this happens. As almost always occurs when we do the right thing, society will adjust, and people will gradually learn that this is the best and most fair way for all of us to live – as equals with the same rights for