Tips on how you can be a financial feminist with Tori Dunlap
Learn how you can be a financial feminist with Tori Dunlop or help support the women in your life here. Then, get a kick start on your journey to financial independence by eliminating credit card debt with the free 7-Step Credit Card Debt Slasher.
How can Tori help you overcome financial oppression
Under the patriarchy, marginalized groups are conditioned to play small, especially when it comes to our finances. We’re taught that we don’t deserve any better. And to be grateful for anything we get. So, what can women, people of color, disabled and queer communities do to pursue financial abundance?
Tori Dunlap is the internationally recognized money and career expert behind Her First $100K, a platform that fights financial inequality by giving women actionable resources to better their money. She is also the New York Times bestselling author of Financial Feminist: Overcome the Patriarchy’s Bullsh*t to Master Your Money and Build a Life You Love.
On this episode of Queer Money, Tori joins us to explain why our feelings about money are intentionally weaponized and how the patriarchy punishes marginalized groups for trying to improve our financial situation. Tori describes how financial advice geared toward men differs from financial advice for women and discusses the criticism she faces as a female public figure in the personal finance space.
Listen in for Tori’s take on Dave Ramsey’s support of donor-advised funds and learn how you can overcome financial oppression, build your money confidence and change the world!
Listen to get more insight into how to be a financial feminist with Tori Dunlap
Topics covered on how to be a financial feminist with Tori Dunlap
- The toxic boss that inspired Tori to get her financial ducks in a row
- Tori’s mission to help marginalized groups get the resources we need to leave toxic situations
- How marginalized communities are conditioned to play small
- How our feelings about money are intentionally weaponized
- How the patriarchy punishes marginalized groups for trying to improve our financial situation
- Why it makes people uncomfortable when someone from a marginalized group demands better
- How financial advice for men is about expansion while advice for women and other marginalized communities is about shrinking
- The criticism Tori faces as a woman in the personal finance space
- How the stories of Victoria Woodhull and Tennessee Claflin represent the patriarchy’s dominance in finance
- Tori’s take on Dave Ramsey and the donor-advised funds recommended by Kingdom Advisors
- The experience of oppression in finance among women, people of color, disabled people, and the LGBTQ+ community
Connect with Tori
- Her First $100K
- Financial Feminist Podcast
- HerFirst100K on Instagram
- HerFirst100K on Twitter
- HerFirst100K on Facebook
- $100K Club Facebook Group
Resources on how to be a financial feminist with Tori Dunlap
- Financial Feminist: Overcome the Patriarchy’s Bullsh*t to Master Your Money and Build a Life You Love by Tori Dunlap
- Treasury.app
- Tom Brickman on Queer Money EP382
- The Four Agreements: A Practical Guide to Personal Freedom by Don Miguel Ruiz
- Oprah Q&A at Stanford on YouTube
- Hannibal Johnson on Queer Money EP249
- Donor-Advised Funds on Queer Money EP386
- Gabe Dunn on Financial Feminist EP054
- The Debt Free Guys on Financial Feminist EP023
- CreditWise
Connect with David and John
- Debt Free Guys on Facebook
- Debt Free Guys on Twitter
- Debt Free Guys on Youtube
- Queer Money Facebook Group
- Queer Money on Instagram
- Subscribe on Apple Podcasts
- Email [email protected]
Watch this week’s episode on how to be a financial feminist with Tori Dunlap
Previous 3 Podcast Episodes
- How to Build a Profitable Email List
- 11 Ways Queer Students Can Afford Out-of-State Tuition
- How to Spot and Stop Financial Fornication
We’re David and John Auten-Schneider, the Debt Free Guys (www.debtfreeguys.com) and hosts of the Queer Money® podcast. We help queer people (and allies) live fabulously not fabulously broke by helping them 1) pay off credit card debt, 2) become part- or full-time entrepreneurs and 3) save and invest for retirement.