Skip to main content

War & Peace Quote by Eleanor Roosevelt

"The battle for the individual rights of women is one of long standing, and none of us should countenance anything which undermines it"

About this Quote

There is steel under the civility here. Roosevelt doesn’t frame women’s rights as a fashionable cause or a benevolent gift handed down by enlightened institutions. She calls it a “battle,” a word that drags the issue out of the parlor and into the realm of conflict, sacrifice, and strategy. “Long standing” does more than nod to history; it’s a rebuttal to the perennial idea that women’s demands are sudden, disruptive, or “new.” The struggle predates the current news cycle and will outlast any one administration, including her husband’s.

The phrase “individual rights” is doing careful work. It sidesteps the patronizing language of “women’s issues” and places gender equality inside the American civic religion of rights-bearing individuals. That’s an argument designed to be legible to skeptics: you don’t have to like feminism to respect rights. It also quietly warns against treating women as a special-interest bloc; the claim is universalist, not factional.

Then comes the moral tripwire: “none of us should countenance.” Countenance means tolerate, normalize, excuse. Roosevelt is anticipating the softer forms of backlash: procedural delays, polite compromises, jokes, “pragmatic” trade-offs, and strategic silences. As First Lady, she understood how power often undermines reform without openly opposing it. The line pressures allies as much as opponents, insisting that complicity isn’t neutral. In the mid-century moment - with war, labor shifts, and postwar retrenchment tugging women’s roles back and forth - her warning reads like an instruction: progress doesn’t just face enemies; it leaks away through accommodation.

Quote Details

TopicHuman Rights
SourceHelp us find the source
Cite

Citation Formats

APA Style (7th ed.)
Roosevelt, Eleanor. (2026, February 20). The battle for the individual rights of women is one of long standing, and none of us should countenance anything which undermines it. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/the-battle-for-the-individual-rights-of-women-is-19288/

Chicago Style
Roosevelt, Eleanor. "The battle for the individual rights of women is one of long standing, and none of us should countenance anything which undermines it." FixQuotes. February 20, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/the-battle-for-the-individual-rights-of-women-is-19288/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"The battle for the individual rights of women is one of long standing, and none of us should countenance anything which undermines it." FixQuotes, 20 Feb. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/the-battle-for-the-individual-rights-of-women-is-19288/. Accessed 27 Mar. 2026.

More Quotes by Eleanor Add to List
Eleanor Roosevelt on Womens Individual Rights
Click to enlarge Portrait | Landscape

About the Author

Eleanor Roosevelt

Eleanor Roosevelt (October 11, 1884 - November 7, 1962) was a First Lady from USA.

59 more quotes available

View Profile

Similar Quotes

We use cookies and local storage to personalize content, analyze traffic, and provide social media features. We also share information about your use of our site with our social media and analytics partners. By continuing to use our site, you consent to our Privacy Policy.