
Hospitals call it medical waste. Biotech companies call it a goldmine. The global placenta market is worth over a billion dollars — and the woman who produced it gets nothing. Not even told

She dropped out of college to care for her dying stepfather, watched her first business fail, and started her jewelry empire with $500 while pregnant and broke. Every boutique said no. She kept walking.

Iraq lowered the age of consent to nine. Men tweeted "your body my choice." A rapist said he thought the woman was dead. Women in Sudan are choosing death over assault. Pay attention.

Queen Victoria didn’t just dislike pregnancy — she helped rewrite the rules of childbirth. When she chose chloroform in labor, she challenged religion, medicine, and centuries of belief that women were meant to suffer.

Utah just became one of the few states to ban police from polygraphing rape victims before taking their report. It took one woman "failing" a test — and her attacker spending two more years assaulting women — to make it happen.

In 1688, a philosopher asked a riddle about blindness and sight. It took 315 years and five surgeries to answer it. The answer unsettled everything we thought we knew about how we see.

She was gang-raped, jumped from a fifth-floor building, and spent her remaining years paraplegic and in constant pain. Every court rejected her father's fight to keep her alive. Today, she chose to stop suffering.
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