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Remember I am not on line tomorrow but Thursday I will be of..

Remember I am not on line tomorrow but Thursday I will be offering all chats half price!!!

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Using my slave @subboy4all as my scratching post

Using my slave @subboy4all as my scratching post

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Your slave task for Monday October 10th 2022 These slave ta..

Your slave task for Monday October 10th 2022 These slave tasks are designed to be interactive - feel free to send any pictures / videos of yourself completing the tasks to my inbox for my reply

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♀️ Feminist Friday ♀️ Sarah Emily Davies Emily Davies was ..

♀️ Feminist Friday ♀️ Sarah Emily Davies Emily Davies was a promoter of higher education for women and an early campaigner for women’s suffrage. Her most significant achievement was the founding of Girton College, the first residential college for women to offer degree-level education. Now hanging in the dining hall of Girton College, this portrait of Emily Davies was painted in 1880 while she was still living at 17 Cunningham Place in St John’s Wood Born in Southampton and raised in Gateshead, Davies came with her mother, Mary, to London in January 1862, following the death of her father. The pair – with a cook and a housemaid – moved immediately into 17 Cunningham Place, a house found for them in St John’s Wood by Emily’s brother Llewelyn. Part of an early to mid-19th-century terrace, it was apparently ‘small but cheerful’, with ‘a minute garden in which Mrs [Mary] Davies could potter about to her heart’s content’, and its position was described by Emily as ‘ideal’. It continued to be her home until shortly after her mother’s death in 1886. Once in London, Davies actively campaigned to raise the status of women. Working with her friends from the Langham Place group – Barbara Leigh Bodichon (1827–91), Elizabeth Garrett Anderson (1836–1917), Frances Mary Buss (1827–94) and others – she pressed for the opening of university courses and professional careers to women. In 1866 she published her successful book The Higher Education of Women, and later the same year the London Schoolmistresses’ Association was founded at number 17, with Emily as Secretary. Most notably, in 1869 Davies and Bodichon founded Girton College, based initially at Hitchin, Hertfordshire, and from 1873 on the edge of Cambridge. Girton, a residential college where women took the same courses and exams as men, remained a major part of Davies’s life until 1904, and survives as her greatest memorial. However, it did not become part of Cambridge University until 1948. As part of the Kensington Society – a ladies’ debating group comprised of many from the Langham Place set and other like-minded women – Davies helped organise the petition for women’s suffrage which was presented to Parliament by John Stuart Mill in 1866. Although she subsequently dedicated most of her time to Girton and women’s higher education, she returned to the suffrage cause in 1904, becoming secretary of the National Society for Women’s Suffrage and later one of the vice-presidents of the Conservative and Unionist Women’s Franchise Association. In the general election of December 1918 – the first in which the right to vote was extended to (some) women – she was the only one of the original Langham Place group still alive to cast a vote.

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Your slave task for Friday October 7th 2022 These slave tas..

Your slave task for Friday October 7th 2022 These slave tasks are designed to be interactive - feel free to send any pictures / videos of yourself completing the tasks to my inbox for my reply

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Enjoy some latexy sounds 😍

Enjoy some latexy sounds 😍

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A little update

A little update

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Your slave task for Monday October 3rd 2022 These slave tas..

Your slave task for Monday October 3rd 2022 These slave tasks are designed to be interactive - feel free to send any pictures / videos of yourself completing the tasks to my inbox for my reply

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♀️ Feminist Friday ♀️ Helen Blackburn Blackburn was born i..

♀️ Feminist Friday ♀️ Helen Blackburn Blackburn was born in Knightstown, co. Kerry, Ireland, the daughter of Bewicke Blackburn, a civil engineer, of co. Kerry and Isabella Lamb of co. Durham. When her family moved to London in 1859,[1] she soon came into contact with the women of the Langham Place Group, especially Jessie Boucherett and Emily Faithfull. Over the years Blackburn and Boucherett worked together in a number of endeavours. Both were editors of the Englishwoman's Review (Blackburn, editor, 1880–90; joint editor, 1890–95).[1] Together they established the Women's Employment Defence League in 1891, to defend women's working rights against restrictive employment legislation.[2] They also together edited The Condition of Working Women and the Factory Acts, 1896. Blackburn joined the National Society for Women's Suffrage in 1872 and was secretary of the executive committee of the society from 1874 to 1880. She subsequently held similar positions in a number of related organisations.[3] She also took opportunities to study, first in 1875, taking a class in Roman Law at University College London, and later (1886–88) classes at University College, Bristol.[4] In the early 1890s, she assisted Charlotte Carmichael Stopes in her writing of British Freewomen: Their Historical Privilege by supplying her own notes on the subject, then by purchasing the whole of the first edition in 1894.[5] She retired in 1895 to care for her aged father, though later returned to take up her work.[4] Blackburn inspired and funded two collections. The first was an art collection in 1885 that included pictures and work done by professional women to show the result of women's industry. She was insistent that this would not include voluntary or amateurish work but it would show the products of female professionals. The Loan Exhibition of Women's Industries included portraits of leading women like Florence Nightingale and Mary Carpenter. This was donated to Bristol University, but recent enquiries indicate that this work is now lost.[6] Her second collection was focussed on a book collection by women. The books were from her collection, friends and from second hand sources. Bookplates were commissioned and two bookcases. The bookcases were decorated with paintings of Lydia Becker and Caroline Ashurst Biggs who had been the previous chairs of the Central Committee of the National Society for Women’s Suffrage. These bookcases were given to Girton College and are extant.[6] In 1880 Blackburn was secretary of the West of England Suffrage Society in Bristol and was the main organizer of a large demonstration.[7] Her long term connection with the women's movement allowed her to write her history of the Victorian women's suffrage campaign, Women's suffrage: a record of the women's suffrage movement in the British Isles, with biographical sketches of Miss Becker, finished in 1902, shortly before her death the following year, at Greycoat Gardens, Westminster, on 11 January 1903, aged 60, and was buried at Brompton Cemetery.[1] She left her archives, and the decorated book collection, to Girton College, Cambridge.[8] Her will also made provisions for establishing a loan fund for training yo ung women.[1] In 1903 collaboration with Nora Vynne created the book Women under the Factory Act. In the book they criticised legislators for treating women as if they had not the intelligence of animals i.e. as if they always needed to be cared for to protect them. She and Vynne argued that women should be allowed to take risks with their health in the workplace or they may find themselves always in need to protection as if they were incapable.[9] The book was noted for its accuracy, but the Economic Journal recognised its authors as Freedom of Labour Defence members and suspected that it may have political motives arguing for the "equality of men and women".[10]

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Your slave task for Friday September 30th 2022 These slave ..

Your slave task for Friday September 30th 2022 These slave tasks are designed to be interactive - feel free to send any pictures / videos of yourself completing the tasks to my inbox for my reply

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On line now

On line now

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On line now

On line now

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"Wrapped and Edged" pt 1 “I have lots and lots of fun thing..

"Wrapped and Edged" pt 1 “I have lots and lots of fun things in store for you” purrs Goddess Serena, securing her slave into her bondage chair with leather straps before encasing his body with red pallet wrap. Cutting out a hole for access, his chastity cage is removed, and his cock is fed into a penis pump which is filled with pressure pump by torturous pump until his cock becomes engorged and tender. Slave is gagged and his sore cock and balls are teased with a rather industrial looking vibrator. To be continued in Wrapped and Edged part 2.

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Sorry for the quiet few days! Very busy week coming. Expect ..

Sorry for the quiet few days! Very busy week coming. Expect a professional clipstore clip to drop here tomorrow!

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On line now

On line now

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On line now until 2pm

On line now until 2pm

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Your slave task for Monday September 26th 2022 These slave ..

Your slave task for Monday September 26th 2022 These slave tasks are designed to be interactive - feel free to send any pictures / videos of yourself completing the tasks to my inbox for my reply

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♀️ Feminist Friday ♀️ Durriyyah Shafīq Doria Shafik, also ..

♀️ Feminist Friday ♀️ Durriyyah Shafīq Doria Shafik, also spelled Durriyyah Shafīq, (born December 14, 1919, Ṭanṭā, Egypt—died September 1975, Cairo), Egyptian educator, journalist, and reformer who campaigned for women’s rights in Egypt and founded (1948) the Egyptian women’s organization Bint al-Nīl (“Daughter of the Nile”). Shafīq was born in Lower Egypt and received a Western-style education in French and Italian schools. She was a great admirer of Egyptian feminist pioneer Hudā Shaʿrāwī, who helped Shafīq continue her education in France. She obtained a doctorate from the Sorbonne—the first Egyptian woman to do so—and returned to Egypt in 1940. In her homeland she taught for several years and founded the magazine Bint al-Nīl, an organ devoted to promoting women’s issues. Three years later she founded the organization of the same name. “To want and to dare! Never hesitate to act when the feeling of injustice revolts us.” - Doria Shafik The group engaged in a variety of social and political activities. In 1951 members interrupted a session of the Egyptian parliament and demonstrated in Cairo. In 1954 Shafīq and some of her followers went on a week’s hunger strike to protest for women’s rights. Some believe these tactics were influential in Egypt’s decision to grant women the franchise in 1956. Later demonstrations, challenging the autocratic rule of Egyptian president Gamal Abdel Nasser, were not successful, and she was roundly censured, even by her erstwhile supporters. Driven from public life, she grew despondent and took her own life.

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Your slave task for Friday September 23rd 2022 These slave ..

Your slave task for Friday September 23rd 2022 These slave tasks are designed to be interactive - feel free to send any pictures / videos of yourself completing the tasks to my inbox for my reply

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My Tuesday 💋

My Tuesday 💋

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Just pegged the living life out of @subboy4all, my collared ..

Just pegged the living life out of @subboy4all, my collared & branded lifestyle bitch after she cleaned the dungeon like a good girl in her maids outfit.

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