Luisa Capetillo, born on this day in 1879, was a Puerto Rican labor organizer, feminist, and Christian anarchist. Capetillo advocated for women's suffrage, was arrested for wearing pants in public, and helped raise the minimum wage.
As a labor activist, Capetillo organized workers throughout the United States, worked as a reporter for the FLT (Federacion Libre de Trabajadores), and traveled throughout Puerto Rico, educating and organizing women. Her hometown, Arecibo, became the most unionized area of the country.
Capetillo is considered to be one of Puerto Rico's first suffragists. In 1908, during the FLT convention, Capetillo asked the union to approve a policy for women's suffrage, insisting that all women should have the same right to vote as men. Along with other labor activists, she also helped pass a minimum wage law in the Puerto Rican Legislature.
Today, Capetillo is perhaps best known for being arrested for wearing pants in public, although the charges against her were later dropped.
In 2014, the Legislative Assembly of Puerto Rico honored Capetillo, along with eleven other women, with plaques in the "La Plaza en Honor a la Mujer Puertorriqueña" (Plaza in Honor of Puerto Rican Women).
Capetillo, Luisa - a biography
Megathreads and spaces to hang out:
- ❤️ Come listen to music and Watch movies with your fellow Hexbears nerd, in Cy.tube
- 💖 Come talk in the New Weekly Queer thread
- 💛 Read and talk about a current topics in the News Megathread
- 💚 Come and talk in the Daily Bloomer Thread
- ⭐️ September Movie Nominations ⭐️
reminders:
- 💚 You nerds can join specific comms to see posts about all sorts of topics
- 💙 Hexbear’s algorithm prioritizes comments over upbears
- 💜 Sorting by new you nerd
- 🌈 If you ever want to make your own megathread, you can reserve a spot here nerd
- 🐶 Join the unofficial Hexbear-adjacent Mastodon instance toots.matapacos.dog
Links To Resources (Aid and Theory):
Aid:
Theory:
I've literally thought the exact same thing, like today even. Nietzsche's Death of God is a question that has been haunting me for a while now. I don't like his solution but I understand the feeling. I think a legitimate answer to the Ferni paradox is that sentient life is inherently prone to self-destructive urges as it realizes what it is. I think most people are still social animals instead of thinking animals. When we reach a critical mass of fully-aware thinking animals, I think it could lead to extinction. Life evolves into thinking animals and either destroys itself intentionally or chooses to live in ignorance.
The only way I sorta cope is taking a pseudo-Buddhist approach. If I'm just a vague collection of experiences and neurons, then I was never really sentient in any way that matters. All that was me was just an organ created by the body in order to navigate society. I don't think I'll really die because I never really lived in the first place.
I really do hope I'm just a mistake and life is inherently self-affirming enough to survive the weight of existence. I wouldn't be too upset then, to see myself as a mere link to a theoretical human species worthy of a soul. Even if I'm not evolved enough to deserve a soul, I hope I can contribute to the development of a species which is.