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Marthe48

(20,504 posts)
Thu Jan 16, 2025, 02:56 PM Jan 2025

If women's financial rights are removed

How will that work? I'm a widow, and my husband left me our joint belongings. My income is based on his earnings. Is my financial autonomy safe? Should I put everything in a trusted male relative's name?

I just read another list of things women weren't alllowed to do, even until 1974, after I was married. The idiots don't seem to mind destroying the economy, if it means they can ruin as many lives as possible.

9 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
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If women's financial rights are removed (Original Post) Marthe48 Jan 2025 OP
I'd keep everything in my name for now. Irish_Dem Jan 2025 #1
Somehow I doubt that women's financial PoindexterOglethorpe Jan 2025 #2
I have real life experiences Lifeafter70 Jan 2025 #3
Single or divorced women could rent but it was actually cheaper to buy a house Autumn Jan 2025 #4
While I didn't buy a house back then, PoindexterOglethorpe Jan 2025 #6
My friend, a single woman teacher Zackzzzz Jan 2025 #5
Where did she live? PoindexterOglethorpe Jan 2025 #9
The Equal Credit Opportunity Act, 1974, finally allowed women in the United States to buy property Timeflyer Jan 2025 #7
I haven't had trouble but I want to keep it that way Marthe48 Jan 2025 #8

Irish_Dem

(68,464 posts)
1. I'd keep everything in my name for now.
Thu Jan 16, 2025, 03:03 PM
Jan 2025

If they start confiscating women's assets, cash and property, they will probably send us
to concentration camps and we won't need our assets anyway.

And if times get really desperate, trusted males might not be so trustworthy.

PoindexterOglethorpe

(27,765 posts)
2. Somehow I doubt that women's financial
Thu Jan 16, 2025, 03:03 PM
Jan 2025

rights will be removed.

I can also assure women that well before 1974 it was possible to do things like rent an apartment or get a credit card without a husband or father signing.

Lifeafter70

(491 posts)
3. I have real life experiences
Thu Jan 16, 2025, 03:17 PM
Jan 2025

That disagree with that. After my divorce I couldn't get a small loan or credit card without a co -signer. My auto insurance dropped me. I had good driving and credit while married. During my marriage (1969-1982) I found I needed my husband signature for a variety of things including health care.

Autumn

(47,719 posts)
4. Single or divorced women could rent but it was actually cheaper to buy a house
Thu Jan 16, 2025, 04:04 PM
Jan 2025

than rent for a woman. 1974 was the year of women's financial liberation. Before that it was technically legal for financial institutions to refuse loans to unmarried women, or to require them to have a male co-signer. Women were able to get credit cards in their own names, without a male co- signer in 1974 after the Equal Credit Opportunity Act.

PoindexterOglethorpe

(27,765 posts)
6. While I didn't buy a house back then,
Thu Jan 16, 2025, 05:39 PM
Jan 2025

I can only repeat that I had zero trouble getting credit cards and the like as early as age 18, in 1967.

Maybe it's just that I was single, and banks, etc. were assholes to married women.

PoindexterOglethorpe

(27,765 posts)
9. Where did she live?
Fri Jan 17, 2025, 09:10 PM
Jan 2025

Some states even today seem to be unaware that women are full citizens, and can vote, stuff like that.

I was in Tucson, Arizona, then the DC area at age 20. And as I've said, had no trouble getting credit cards in that time, the mid and late 1960s.

The other question about the teacher needing a co-signer, was her income just a bit low? That's often what triggers needing a co-signer, not gender. In my youth, I witnessed several times where someone naively co-signed for a loan, or a rental, or some such. Then the actual borrower disappeared, leaving the co-signer stuck paying it back.

Timeflyer

(3,105 posts)
7. The Equal Credit Opportunity Act, 1974, finally allowed women in the United States to buy property
Thu Jan 16, 2025, 06:07 PM
Jan 2025

without a male to co sign. Denial like that happened to my aunt. Women usually didn't know about this heinous little rule until they needed that loan.

Marthe48

(20,504 posts)
8. I haven't had trouble but I want to keep it that way
Thu Jan 16, 2025, 06:20 PM
Jan 2025

When my husband was alive, we both signed on all the loans and such. I have a good credit rating on my own now. I worry and maybe I shouldn't, but I want to be prepared for whatever is ahead.

I'll bookmark this post.

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