Tonight on It Takes a Village, Political Jess lights the entire patriarchal group chat on fire with a conversation about women in the year of our lord 2026 — how far we’ve come, how much we’ve survived, and how exhausting it is watching some people try to drag us backward with the energy of a haunted church pamphlet and a podcast microphone.

This episode is furious.It’s funny.It’s deeply personal.And honestly? It’s long overdue.

Because the Village is talking about the war on women — not as a single law, election, or Supreme Court ruling, but as a system. A system that has spent centuries limiting women’s choices while pretending those limitations were somehow “protection.”

We’re talking history.We’re talking bodily autonomy.We’re talking economic control.We’re talking the fact that women in America once couldn’t own property, open bank accounts, keep wages, access credit, or leave marriages without proving they had suffered “enough.” And somehow, in 2026, we’re still debating whether women deserve full control over their own bodies, healthcare, marriages, and futures.

Cool cool cool.Very freedom.Very democracy.Very “land of the free unless you have a uterus and a Wi-Fi connection.”

Political Jess breaks down the terrifying reality that rights for women in America are now increasingly determined by geography — where crossing state lines can change your bodily autonomy faster than a gas station bathroom key exchange.

The panel dives into:

* attacks on reproductive healthcare

* the backlash against women’s independence

* economic inequality

* no-fault divorce

* domestic violence

* medical misogyny

* motherhood and fear

* how patriarchy trains women to survive while rewarding men for simply existing comfortably inside systems built for them.

And through all of it runs one giant uncomfortable truth:Women are no longer asking permission.

That’s the real panic.Not birth rates.Not “traditional values.”Not whatever nonsense some mediocre podcast philosopher is crying about between crypto ads.

Independence.

Because once women can own homes, leave bad marriages, reject bad men, build wealth, choose careers, delay motherhood, control reproduction, and exist outside male approval, patriarchy starts looking a lot less like “nature” and a lot more like what it always was:a power structure terrified of losing control.

The Village also gets painfully honest about the emotional labor women carry every single day:raising daughters in a world that still teaches girls how not to get hurt instead of teaching boys not to harm,navigating male-dominated workplaces,being talked over,being underestimated,being told to smile more,being expected to absorb pain quietly,and somehow still being asked to hold society together while being treated like a supporting character in our own damn story.

But this episode is not hopeless.

Not even close.

Because underneath the rage is something stronger:women who survived anyway.Women who built anyway.Women who organized anyway.Women who loved, led, worked, raised families, created businesses, fought systems, protected communities, and carved out freedom anyway.

This conversation is messy, raw, heartbreaking, hilarious, and deeply human.It’s about mothers raising daughters.Women raising sons differently.Men learning to stand beside instead of in front.And the Village refusing to quietly hand over rights that generations of women bled to secure.

So if you’ve ever been told you were “too loud,” “too emotional,” “too ambitious,” “too difficult,” “too angry,” or “too much” — congratulations.

You are probably paying attention.

And the Village is very glad you’re here.



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