Originally posted by EPelle
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Klüft och Kristiansson planerar bröllop
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Originally posted by Mats NilssonBoth Kristian and Carolina deserves all the best. Good luck!
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Originally posted by unclezadokOriginally posted by PowellOriginally posted by jazzcyclistHow many other countries in the world this would be socially acceptable? Afterall, some European countries, such as Spain, Italy and France, are even more male chauvinistic than the US
Anyway, in Italy a married woman is almost never referred to with her husband's family name. They may be a family but each keeps his/her own surname.
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Sweet and classy athlete, but I just had to do it. I wish I had one on myself when I was this euphoric. Both Kristian and Carolina deserves all the best. Good luck!
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Originally posted by PowellOriginally posted by jazzcyclistHow many other countries in the world this would be socially acceptable? Afterall, some European countries, such as Spain, Italy and France, are even more male chauvinistic than the US
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Originally posted by PowellBut the fact that a woman ran for president for one of the two major parties and came close to winning the elections is an argument against France being a male chauvinist country. The fact that she is in an non-legalized relationship is secondary.
And I'm honestly shocked at your belief a woman's decision not to change he name can have such political ramifications. I always think I live in a very conservative country, but I can't imagine it being a big deal here.
She was Hillary Rodham during her years as a rising Arkansas lawyer seeking an independent identity from her husband, the governor. She added Clinton to her name after his defeat for reelection in 1980; her decision to keep her maiden name had troubled some Arkansas voters.
The shift to Hillary Rodham Clinton signaled a new investment in her husband's career as governor and president, during which she was a key adviser, leading up to her own election to the Senate in 2000.
But now, as a presidential candidate, she's Hillary Clinton -- or just Hillary -- and some analysts say it makes sense for her to streamline her name. Dropping "Rodham," they contend, would erase feminist overtones and soften her image, taking the edge off one of the more sharply polarizing figures of the last two decades.
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But the fact that a woman ran for president for one of the two major parties and came close to winning the elections is an argument against France being a male chauvinist country. The fact that she is in an non-legalized relationship is secondary.
And I'm honestly shocked at your belief a woman's decision not to change he name can have such political ramifications. I always think I live in a very conservative country, but I can't imagine it being a big deal here.
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Originally posted by PowellOriginally posted by jazzcyclistHow many other countries in the world this would be socially acceptable? Afterall, some European countries, such as Spain, Italy and France, are even more male chauvinistic than the US
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Originally posted by FlumpyAnd women didn't gte the vote until 1944!!!
Poland gave women voting rights in 1918, but that doesn't make us more liberal than the French (I mean the society as a whole, not myself).
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Originally posted by PowellOriginally posted by jazzcyclistHow many other countries in the world this would be socially acceptable? Afterall, some European countries, such as Spain, Italy and France, are even more male chauvinistic than the US
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Originally posted by jazzcyclistHow many other countries in the world this would be socially acceptable? Afterall, some European countries, such as Spain, Italy and France, are even more male chauvinistic than the US, not to mention, Africa, South America and Asia.
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Originally posted by jazzcyclistHow many other countries in the world this would be socially acceptable? Afterall, some European countries, such as Spain, Italy and France, are even more male chauvinistic than the US
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How many other countries in the world this would be socially acceptable? Afterall, some European countries, such as Spain, Italy and France, are even more male chauvinistic than the US, not to mention, Africa, South America and Asia.
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Originally posted by JaackOriginally posted by EPelleLots of stock in the name Klüft. Couldn:t imagine CK being another "CK". Too many of us are Johansson, Olsson, Jakobsson, Kristiansson, et al.
Did you see the movie "Me, Myself and Dupree"?
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Originally posted by JaackOriginally posted by EPelleLots of stock in the name Klüft. Couldn:t imagine CK being another "CK". Too many of us are Johansson, Olsson, Jakobsson, Kristiansson, et al.
Did you see the movie "Me, Myself and Dupree"?
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