Hi. My name is Loud Mouth welcome to my blog where we talk about everything the things are mostly affect us .I'm here to create awareness on politics,gender equality,social and mental issues and its not limited to women alone Emma Watson said "as men gender inequality is your issue too because to date I have seen fathers as parents being valued less by society despite children needing their presence much as mothers I've seen young men suffering from mental issues unable to ask for help for fear it would help them look less macho suicide is the biggest killer of men between 20-49 years of age eclipsing road accidents cancer and coronary heart disease". I've created a safe space for everyone to talk regardless of our different ideas and perceptions so whether you are a liberal,conservative, don't like labels or couldn't care less we could talk about the issues that affect us social issues like poverty drug abuse, prostitution, racial discrimination, alcohol abuse, economic deprivation, political corruption, unemployment, sexual abuse, the shortage of schools and lack of infrastructure but not only that we talk about everything from politics to health social and mental issues movies music sex, gender equality, sports, business, money and little celebrity news to spice things up ..you can follow me on Instagram @loud._mouth and on Twitter @loudmouth share your stories with me and let's change the status quo.
There is this saying that goes "what a man can do, a woman can do it better". Not true in all cases but one can see where they are coming from. Anytime we hear the word "dictator" we think of the likes of Adolf Hitler, Idi Amin, Josef Stalin, Benito Mussolini etc, we always tend to forget the women. Why? I don't know. Luckily y'all have me(you're welcome). These women helped shaped history even though it cost the lives of thousands of people. 7. AGRIPPINA Born in AD 15 in Rome,Agrippina the Younger was the great granddaughter of Roman Emperor Augustus and sister of the Emperor Caligula. In AD 39, Caligula exiled her for conspiring against him, but he allowed her to return to Rome in AD 41. In AD 49, Agrippina saw her main chance and seized it. Poisoning her second husband, Passienus Crispus, she married her uncle, the Emperor Claudius, by then an old and feeble man, and effectively took control. Agrippina soon bullied Claudius into adopting her son Nero...
nice work..cant wait to see more
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