No. What I noted were a series of presumptive errors about women's roles in the growth of the nation, the sharing of risk, etc. Anyway, if there's one thing that exchange taught me it's that you aren't interested in learning and repeating it here would simply waste more of my time.
It's a bit like suggesting slavery existed though most weren't racist. In any event, the system was and the impact of the system bore the seal and agreement of those who sustained it. If you deny half your population the right to vote or own land whether you hold them in contempt by your own understanding is a point of no particular interest.
They're right, in the main. It took the concerted work of women over time to achieve the vote, by way of.
Of course it could and did, though as with slavery or any social change here it required the enlightened participation of a growing number of men who, faced with a movement rooted in reason and integrity were compelled to respond in kind. And some gave ground because they understood the course. You think the British simply decided to give India back to it's people? Are you under the impression that whites here simply woke up and decided it would be a good idea for blacks to have the unrestricted access to power that voting entails?
Continue with your myth or rationality...or trolling. We both know that's the real ticket to your amusement park.
I think that, beyond the particular error, the way you can't divorce yourself from sweepingly singular thinking is mostly evidence of your own problem, both in approach and in understanding others.