{"id":7295,"date":"2026-06-29T08:36:07","date_gmt":"2026-06-29T08:36:07","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/youtubexyoutube.com\/?p=7295"},"modified":"2026-07-03T13:50:00","modified_gmt":"2026-07-03T13:50:00","slug":"what-russian-feminists-actually-want","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"http:\/\/youtubexyoutube.com\/index.php\/2026\/06\/29\/what-russian-feminists-actually-want\/","title":{"rendered":"What Russian feminists actually want"},"content":{"rendered":"
The world was built around men, and women are tired of adapting to it<\/strong><\/p>\n If you think feminism is about splitting the bill at a restaurant and insisting that women join the army, I have bad news for you. You know little about feminism, and even less about what women are actually fighting for. You also have no idea how often the modern world still works as a man\u2019s world, one in which women are expected to adapt.<\/p>\n Let\u2019s start with the home, where one of the main injustices begins. It is also one of the reasons women with families so often struggle to build careers.<\/p>\n I am not talking only about washing dishes or doing laundry. I mean the invisible control center that runs constantly in a woman\u2019s head: booking the child\u2019s dentist appointment, checking homework, soaking the beans, buying washing powder, remembering what is missing from the fridge. Across the world, women carry out around three-quarters of unpaid domestic work. This is not just cleaning and cooking. It is a constant stream of tasks that is not pinned to the fridge as a neat list, but simply lives in the back of her mind.<\/p>\n Career progress often depends on being able to stay late at work, or sit with your boss at a company party late into the night, discussing strategy over a few drinks. But who is at home with the children? Who picks them up from daycare? That\u2019s right: women. They miss the chance to be treated as fully available employees because everything at home still has to be in order, and because the child has to come home on time and not go to bed alone.<\/p>\n \n Read more<\/strong><\/span><\/p>\n In 1975, Icelandic women staged a strike that is still talked about today. One Friday, 90% of women simply did not turn up for work and did not lift a finger around the house. Men had to cope with the household chores on their own. Ready meals disappeared from supermarkets within hours. Offices filled with crying children because nursery staff were women too. Even calling someone to arrange help became difficult, because those workers were also women. After that day, many laws in Iceland were revised to improve women\u2019s lives.<\/p>\n Now let\u2019s step outside. I am a mother with a baby carriage, and the city greets me with staircases without ramps, narrow sidewalks and raised curbs that seem to ask: are you sure you want to go this way? Most buildings and streets were designed without considering that a woman might be moving through the city with a baby carriage, following a route that takes her to school, work, the clinic and the shop. This is not necessarily malicious. It is simply that the people sitting at the planning table for hours had often never pushed a baby carriage themselves.<\/p>\n Then I get into the car and once again feel as if I have been forgotten. For decades, crash tests were carried out using male dummies, with male body shapes and weight distributions. Engineers are not conspirators, of course. The female body is more complex to model. But the result is the same: in an identical crash, a woman may face a higher risk of serious injury because the safety systems were not calibrated for her. Perhaps it is time to put dummies with different measurements in the car.<\/p>\n Now imagine I have driven to the pharmacy. For a long time, medicines were tested mainly on men, while women were sidelined. After all, we have periods, hormonal fluctuations and the possibility of becoming pregnant, so how can the experiment be \u201cpure\u201d<\/em>? As a result, women take medicines tested on a hypothetical 70-kilogram man, and doctors are sometimes genuinely surprised when the body does not react as the textbook says it should.<\/p>\n