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Your slave task for Friday 17th December #SlaveTask

Your slave task for Friday 17th December #SlaveTask

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"Trust in Me" Trussed up, suspended and gagged, slave is at..

"Trust in Me" Trussed up, suspended and gagged, slave is at the total mercy of Goddess Serena. The reason for his predicament and the vulnerability of his manhood is soon to be revealed. Goddess is in the mood for administering some C BT and man brain confusion, after all the pathetic man is easily manipulated by his stupid little cock! Pleasure pain Pleasure pain Pleasure pain, does he have any idea what is going on!

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Your slave task for Monday 13th December #SlaveTask

Your slave task for Monday 13th December #SlaveTask

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Apologies for the lack of content, I’ve been unwell with ano..

Apologies for the lack of content, I’ve been unwell with another cold! I’ll be posting another HD video today to compensate 😉💋

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♀️ Feminist Friday ♀️ Rukhambai Raut A staunch advocate f..

gynarchygoddess post ♀️ Feminist Friday ♀️

Rukhambai Raut


A staunch advocate f.. from onlyfans

♀️ Feminist Friday ♀️ Rukhambai Raut A staunch advocate for women’s rights, Rukhmabai Raut was one of India’s first female physicians. She also played an integral role in the enactment of the Age of Consent Act in 1891. Rukhmabai was born in Bombay on 22 November 1864 to Janardhan Pandurang and Jayantibai. Rukhmabai’s mother was a chil d bride; she married to Rukhmabai’s father when she was only 14, was mother by 15 and a widow by 17. Given that chil d marriage was so common in India during this time, Rukhmabai too became a chil d bride. When she was only 11 ye ars old, she was to marry a 19 year old man, Dadaji Bhikaji. Rukhmabai’s step-father Sakharam Arjun requested that Dadaji live at their home, be provided for, take education and become “a good man” before taking Rukhmabai to live with him. During this time, and contrary to her country’s customs, Rukhmabai was encouraged to educate herself by her step-father. Sakharam Arjun was an acclaimed physician and botanist. Rukhmabai was eager to follow in his footsteps. However, when Rukhmabai reached puberty, her husband felt it time to live with her, and to embark on the ritual consummation of marriage. In a shockingly brave move, Rukhmabai refused – with the support of Sakharam Arjun, who had strong reformist tendencies. Un willing to accept her refusal, in 1884, her husband took her to court, suing her for “restoration of conjugal rights.” Still, Rukhmabai resisted. In a case that lasted three years and garnered a great deal of national and international attention, the court sided with her husband, ruling that Rukhmabai must either consent to living in her husband’s home or serve time in prison. Rukhmabai reportedly said she would rather be imprisoned than for ced into a marriage she did not want. This was at the height of the British Empire, and Rukhmabai decided to appeal directly to Queen Victoria. Un willing to let Rukhmabai go to prison, Queen Victoria opted to overrule the court and dissolve Rukhmabai’s marriage. In order to prevent such things from happening in the future, the Age of Consent Act was passed in 1891, though it was met with dissenters from the conservative Indian community. Finally free from the marriage she did not choose, Rukhmabai traveled to England to study medicine. She returned to India in 1894 as one of the country’s first female physicians and spent 35 years serving as a chief medical officer. She also continued serving as an advocate for the abolition of chil d marriage, writing extensively on the subject. She died in 1955 at the age of 91.

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Your slave task for Friday 10th December #SlaveTask

Your slave task for Friday 10th December #SlaveTask

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One from the archives for you! "Tiny Little Man Brains" As..

One from the archives for you! "Tiny Little Man Brains" As we all know Gynarchy Goddess Mistress Serena is an avid supporter of Matriarchy as the pathetic male creature has proved incapable of thinking with the brain in his head and is ruled by the pathetic little brains that hang between his legs! A healthy administration of ball busting can be a gentile reminder of his failings, and Mistress Serena in her sexy high heels is more than happy to give a kick or two to his tiny little man brain!

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Halloween live stream 2021

Halloween live stream 2021

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Locked in chastity and fed viagra… lots of edging after bein..

Locked in chastity and fed viagra… lots of edging after being rubbed down in deep heat cream! 🔥 🔵🔵

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BTS on my Tall Lady cosplay shoot! Still many more photos to..

BTS on my Tall Lady cosplay shoot! Still many more photos to edit and upload.

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♀️ Feminist Friday ♀️ Eileen Nearne In September 2010 an 8..

gynarchygoddess post ♀️ Feminist Friday ♀️

Eileen Nearne

In September 2010 an 8.. from onlyfans

♀️ Feminist Friday ♀️ Eileen Nearne In September 2010 an 89 year old woman died alone in her modest flat in the English seaside town of Torquay. She had been a very private and unassuming person about whom her neighbours hardly knew. But examining her belongings in order to identify her next of kin, the police discovered something incredible: Eileen Nearne had been a heroine of the Second World War, a brilliant and courageous spy who had helped to liberate occupied France and had survived incarceration and tor ture in a Nazi concentration camp. Eileen Nearne, better known as Didi for most of her life, was born in London in March 1921. Her father was English, her mother Spanish and she was the youngest of four children. In 1923 the family moved to France but, following the German invasion in 1940, they made their way back to England through Spain, arriving in London in 1942. She was initially offered a role in the Women’s Auxiliary Air Force but declined it. Probably because of her fluent French, Eileen was soon recruited by the Special Operations Executive in which her sister, Jacqueline, and brother, Francis, also served for a short time. The SOE was an organisation known as “Churchill’s Secret Army” that had been formed to carry out intelligence and sabotage missions in enemy-occupied territories. To begin with, Eileen was a London-based signals operator and dealt with communications from field agents. In March 1944, however, she was parachuted into occupied France together with her colleague, a commander in the French army known as Jean Savy. Using the codename “Rose”, Eileen’s mission was to help Savy set up and maintain a Paris intelligence network called “Wizard”. The purpose of “Wizard” was to seek out and secure funds for the French Resistance. Eileen’s role was to sustain a wireless network between Paris and London which allowed potential financiers to check they were dealing with genuine SOE agents and not German infiltrators. They would devise a phrase of their own choosing, Eileen would send it to operatives in London and, when the prospective backers heard their ‘message personnel’ repeated during broadcasts of the BBC’s European Service, they could be sure their contacts were authentic. With the German forces becoming increasingly more successful at seeking out intelligence networks and safe houses being in high demand, Eileen had to be clever and ever-vigilant to evade discovery and to keep her wireless and equipment hidden. She changed location frequently and, over a five-month period, sent over 100 messages to London. On 21st July 1944, whilst operating from a deserted house on the outskirts of Paris, Eileen was discovered by the German forces. She managed to burn her notebooks and hide her equipment before she was arrested but her radio was found and seized. She was taken to Gestapo headquarters and subjected to prolonged and brutal interrogation. She suffered appalling water tortu re during which she was forcibly submerged face-first in water until she fell uncons cious from oxygen deprivation. Nevertheless, she never divulged the truth and stuck doggedly to her story that she was simply a Frenchwoman in need of employment who had been asked to send some messages on behalf of an English businessman. In August 1944, her head shaved, Eileen was sent to Ravensbrück, the women’s concentration camp where thousands lost their lives. There she was threatened with execution and further to rtured but she never deviated from her cover story no matter how brutally she was treated. In maintaining her brave silence, she ensured the safety of her SOE colleagues stationed in France and the continuation of their work. Over the next few months Eileen was moved around several different labour camps. In April 1945 she was stationed at Markleberg. As the Allied forces were advancing on the labour camp, the inmates were sent on a for ced night-time march. Eileen seized her opportunity to escape and, together with two Frenchwomen, fled the march and sought cover in a forest. Enduring several days without food, the women headed west to Leipzig and took refuge in a church. The Roman Catholic priest there hid the them in a bell tower until the city was liberated by American troops on 15th April. Eileen had lapsed into un consciousness and came around just as America soldiers were storming the bell tower. She identified herself as a British intelligence agent but they assumed she was delirious or lying and would not believe her. Luckily, Eileen’s colleagues in London confirmed her story and she was back in England just a few weeks later. In recognition of her wartime service, Eileen was awarded the Croix de Guerre by the French government and an MBE in London. However, she found it hard to adjust to life in peacetime and struggled with the psychological damage of having been tort ured by the Gestapo. She lived with her sister in London, moving to Torquay after her sister’s death in 1982. She sought out a life of privacy and seclusion, rejecting any and all opportunities to celebrate her wartime heroism. At her death in 2010, the truth of Eileen’s life having been finally discovered, she was given a funeral with full military honours that befitted her service and achievements. In keeping with her wishes, her ashes were scattered at sea.

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Your slave task for Friday 3rd December #SlaveTask

Your slave task for Friday 3rd December #SlaveTask

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oubliette films has had its twitter account suspended again...

oubliette films has had its twitter account suspended again. If you’d like to help, please retweet or comment on my post on twitter and tag @twittersupport and @paraga and ask them to reinstate the account. Thank you!

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This slave has been locked in chastity for a while. I give h..

This slave has been locked in chastity for a while. I give him a little talking through whilst I cane his backside. I’ve already given him the code to unlock himself, he just has to figure it out.

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Your slave task for Monday 29th November #SlaveTask

Your slave task for Monday 29th November #SlaveTask

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♀️ Feminist Friday ♀️ Mary Putnam Jacobi “You must, on the..

gynarchygoddess post ♀️ Feminist Friday ♀️

Mary Putnam Jacobi

“You must, on the.. from onlyfans

♀️ Feminist Friday ♀️ Mary Putnam Jacobi “You must, on the one hand, forget that any social prejudices stand in your way as physicians: but on the other hand you must remember that, in virtue of these, you continue to have certain class interests, which can not, with either justice or safety, be ignored.” – Dr. Mary Putnam Jacobi Dr. Mary Putnam Jacobi was a medical doctor whose work helped disprove many discriminatory assumptions about women’s bodies in her seminal paper, The Question of Rest for Women During Menstru ation. In addition to her medical research, Mary also enabled generations of women to enter the medical profession through her teaching and lobbying. Mary was born in 1842 in London, to American parents. In 1848, the family returned to the US to live in New York, where Mary was also educated. Mary had known she wanted to study medicine from a you ng age. Writing as an adult she recalled, at age 9, finding a dead rat and wanting to cut it open to study its organs. Mary realised her dream in 1861, when she became the first woman admitted to the New York College of Pharmacy and went on to graduate with an M.D. from the Women’s Medical College of Pennsylvania. In 1866, after lobbying the university, Mary became the first woman to study medicine at the École de Médecine in Paris. However, her admission came with stipulations: she was forbidden from entering through the same door as the male students, and she had to sit alone and close to the professor. Later – continuing her tradition of firsts – upon her return to the USA, Mary became the first woman to be voted into the New York Academy of Medicine. In 1873, Edward Clark, M.D., published Sex in Education; or, A Fair Chance For Girls, which argued that women could not cope with the traditional academic demands placed on men. Clark proposed that women who pushed themselves to compete with their male counterparts could experience nervous collapse and sterility. He concluded that if women were to have the same educational rights as men, it would lead to long-term damage to women’s reproductive organs. As women had only just been allowed to enter further education, there was no data to prove nor disprove Clark’s claims. Clark’s paper caused outrage among feminists, especially as much of the First Wave’s fight had been about realising equal education opportunities for women. The Question of Rest for Women During Menstr uation was Mary’s calm and heavily researched response to Clark’s claims. Unlike Clark, who had relied on anecdotal observation, Mary put a range of women through medical trials to investigate their menstru al pain, muscle strength, cycle length and daily exercise; her findings concluded that there was nothing about menstr uation which impaired women’s physical or mental abilities, disproving Clark’s study. In 1876, almost to confirm Mary’s intellectual victory, her paper won the Boylston Medical Prize at Harvard – the school at which Clark taught. The Question of Rest had a structural influence. In the late 19th century, there was a common assumption regarding the biological difference between male and female bodies: that the female body was inferior. As her paper disproved many misconceptions about menstru ation and the capability of the female body using data and research, Mary’s research became an important part of medical literature and contributed towards the changing social perception of the female body. Throughout her career, Mary had been championed by women, including Ann Preston, who had supported Mary at the Women’s Medical College of Pennsylvania, and Marie Zarkrzewska, who gave Mary her first chance to practice medicine at the New England Hospital for Women and Children in 1862. Mary used her early experience of being supported by women as a model for her own career. She mentored female students, taught at the Women’s Medical College of the New York Infirmary for Women and Children and founded the Association of the Medical Education of Women, which later became the Women’s Medical Association of New York City. She also continued to lobby universities to accept women to study medicine throughout her career. In addition to her work as a medical doctor, Mary was a prolific writer. In 1860, two years before she began her medical studies, Mary’s first short story, Lost and Found, was published in The Atlantic. Throughout her life, she published 9 books and over 120 medical articles. In 1873, Mary married Dr. Abraham Jacobi, who specialised in paediatrics. The couple had three children together, although only one survived to adulthood. Mary died in 1906 at age 63, but not before predicting her own death and cause of death in a detailed investigation into her own illness – Description of the Early Symptoms of the Meningeal Tumor Compressing the Cerebellum. From Which the Writer Died. Written by Herself. Mary’s work and attitude of challenging assumptions about the female body remain of vital importance today. As questions over the tampon tax, female fertility rates and smear test practices continue to be raised, the solution becomes clearer: that more women, and more feminists, need to be encouraged to enter medicine, politics and public life in order to continue to change medical practices, policies and debates around female health.

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Your slave task for Friday 26th November #SlaveTask

Your slave task for Friday 26th November #SlaveTask

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Your slave task for Monday 22nd November #SlaveTask

Your slave task for Monday 22nd November #SlaveTask

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♀️ Feminist Friday ♀️ Madam CJ Walker Madam CJ Walker was ..

gynarchygoddess post ♀️ Feminist Friday ♀️

Madam CJ Walker

Madam CJ Walker was .. from onlyfans

♀️ Feminist Friday ♀️ Madam CJ Walker Madam CJ Walker was the first African American woman to become a self-made millionaire through developing revolutionary hair care products for black people. In addition to her business, Walker was tireless activist and philanthropist for the African American community in America. Walker was born Sarah Breedlove on 23 December 1867 on a Louisiana cotton plantation. One of five children, she was was orphaned at seven years old, married at fourte en and widowed at twenty, with a daughter to support. She took her daughter A’Leila to St Louis where her brothers had established themselves as barbers in the city. There, she began working as a washerwoman, and earned enough money to be able to send A’Leila to school in St Louis. It was in St Louis that she met her second husband Charles J. Walker who worked in newspaper sales. During the 1890s, she suffered from alopecia and began to experiment with different treatments, including those by Annie Malone, another pioneering black entrepreneur. Hair loss was a common ailment among black women at the time, due to scalp diseases and products which damaged hair – not to mention stress and poor diet. In 1905, Breedlove began working as an agent for entrepreneur Annie Turnbo’s company, Pope Malone’s Poro Co. She sold their product The Great Wonderful Hair Grower whilst also experimenting with her own products. During this period, Breedlove and her family relocated to Denver, and she began to use the name Madam CJ Walker for her own business. The centre of her business became Madam Walker’s Wonderful Hair Grower – a scalp conditioning and healing formula. Walker sold her products directly to black women. The philosophy behind the products was ‘cleanliness and loveliness’, which also had a political agenda behind it: advancing the status of African Americans in American society. The products were hugely successful and in 1908, the company opened a factory and a beauty school in Pittsburg. The business relocated to Indianapolis in 1910 where they manufactured cosmetics and trained sales beauticians. Walker trained her saleswomen to use ‘The Walker Method’, a combination of scalp preparation, application of lotions, and the use of hot iron combs, resulting in smooth hair. These agents became known as ‘Walker Agents’ and were well known to black communities across America. Walker went on to employ 40,000 African American men and women across the United States, Central America and Caribbean. And she was a generous employer –she established a nationwide network of employees, and offered bonuses and prizes to employees who contributed to the wider community through charitable work. She was a tireless champion of women, and ran training programs in the ‘Walker System’ for her employees. The charter of her company stated that only a woman could serve as its president. Throughout her life, she donated huge amounts of money to charity; founded educational scholarships for African Americans; supported many philanthropic organisations for the advancement of African Americans in America. In 1913, Walker and her husband divorced. She moved to Harlem in 1916, and quickly became embedded within the political and cultural scene, visiting The White House to present a petition for anti-lynching legislation. That same year (1917), Walker’s ‘Hair Culturists Union of America’ organised one of the first national meetings of business women in America. Madam CJ Walker died of kidney failure at the age of 51 on 25 May 1919. A’Leila inherited her Harlem townhouse which went on to become an epicentre of the Harlem Renaissance. When she died, Walker’s businesses was valued at more than $1 million, making her one of the first American woman to become a self-made millionaire.

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Pt 3 The tables are turned and the stunt cock is now sucking..

Pt 3 The tables are turned and the stunt cock is now sucking the slut for my pleasure and is ordered to snowball the sluts cum from his mouth back into the sluts mouth to get his promised 2 loads

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Your slave task for Friday 19th November #SlaveTask

Your slave task for Friday 19th November #SlaveTask

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Play time update - I changed my mind! 🔐

Play time update - I changed my mind! 🔐

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What I’m doing today

What I’m doing today

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Your slave task for Monday 15th November #SlaveTask

Your slave task for Monday 15th November #SlaveTask

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