Woman Patriot Corporation

The Woman Patriot Corporation (WPC) was an American Progressive Era organization formed by women who had been previously active in the National Association Opposed to Women's Suffrage. The group identified as anticommunist, anti-pacifist, and anti-feminist[1] and was formed in response to the recent enfranchisement of women via the Nineteenth Amendment on August 26, 1920.

Formation

The fear of conservative women at the time was the burgeoning feminist movement taking root in women's colleges which would allegedly plant the idea in men's minds that because women were now seen as independent, they could shirk their economic duties as providers.

Anti-Pacifism

The WPC, having formed after World War I and during the First Red Scare, was allied against communism, anarchy, and pacifism (especially internationally).

In 1932, the Corporation infamously filed a memorandum complaining of Albert Einstein's return to the United States. Einstein, a Jewish German-born American citizen and socialist pacifist, was targeted for his preaching against the use of nuclear weaponry. The Woman Patriot Corporation attempted to bar his entry into the United States[2] and stated:

Einstein was not merely a pernicious influence; he was the ringleader of an anarcho-communist program whose aim was to shatter the military machinery of national governments as a preliminary for world revolution.[3]

gollark: It's possible to brute-force encryption in theory, but modern crypto makes this very impractical to do given constraints like the available size of the universe and stuff.
gollark: <@!692654568827387986> I'm pretty sure you're wrong about encryption here. You can't just magically decrypt stuff without the key. Encrypted data you don't have the key for is indistinguishable from random noise.
gollark: It still has calls to Google stuff in it, they're just visibly there.
gollark: Not really.
gollark: The only infinite scroll thing on my website is the infinite lorem ipsum page, as a joke which probably will eat all your RAM.

References

Sources

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