Fury and Euphoria: A Declaration from Ni Una Menos to Our Feminist Comrades Around the World
The battle for legal abortion in Argentina is the starting point of a much broader struggle.
The battle for legal abortion in Argentina is the starting point of a much broader struggle.
If the law is not passed, we will not leave the streets, and they will not be able to leave the congress building, because in the street legal abortion is already the law.
As elsewhere, 1968 in Argentina was marked by increasingly militant struggles waged by workers and students, but the “Argentine 68” had its own tempo and would not explode until May 1969.Â
Today in Argentina we see a battle for political spirituality in the streets, in houses, in beds, and in schools.
Politicans around the world associate themselves with popular sports, but in South America the relationship between politicians and football has often been much stronger than that.
We were born from the confluence that is taking place between workers in neighborhoods, in factories, in the popular economy, between domestic workers, care workers, precarious workers, among those organized in unions and multiple other feminist collectives, among those who don’t have a visible boss but engage in piece work in their homes and those who are unemployed workers.
At its heart, a politics in feminine ensures that social reproduction is our collective responsibility.