Roughly a year ago, millions of women gathered together in
their pink pussy hats to make the Women's March in 2017 the absolute awe - inspiring, history - making march that it was.
Sandwiched between photos of uteruses and
pink pussy hats, my friend from Princeton posted this status to her Facebook: «tfw your prof returns your dean's date paper with thorough feedback the same week she had a baby and basically makes you realize you have absolutely no excuses for not doing work ever #myprofiswonderwoman.»
Like many liberals, Nixon was shocked and shaken by the outcome of the 2016 election, and while she'd gone to the Women's March, wearing
a pink pussy hat and saying Washington had «better think twice about messing with women,» it hadn't seemed like quite enough.
(There is even
a pink pussy hat, and a grouping of shoes that serve as flowerpots.)
Not exact matches
Several marchers wore
pink «
pussy»
hats, and carried banners with slogans like: «this
pussy bites back» after the emergence of a 2005 tape in which Trump spoke of women in a demeaning way sparked widespread outrage.
When thousands upon thousands of politically minded women needed a makeshift symbol for their movement at January's anti-Trump women's marches held worldwide, they reached into their craft closets and took up an old skill: knitted
pink «
pussy hats» became the must - have accessories.
The final piece in this colorful look is my new
pink pussy -
hat, found at a lovely Etsy shop.
For the finale, they walked down the runway with
pink «
pussy hats».
Wearing's statue of Fawcett arrives two years into a new global tradition of Women's Marches — these marked by the
pink of the
pussy hat rather then the berry red, leaf green and white of the suffragists.