Lunncal said:
Believing in gender equality and trying to work towards that ideal is good (as should be obvious to any half-decent human being, really), but you might want to be careful exactly how you do that. To me, (and it's entirely possible I'm wrong about this) it seems like you have exactly the wrong attitude to improve the situation.
Personally, I think "Why I Fight" is a terrible way to phrase it to begin with, you generally don't create social change and educate people by "fighting" them. It's not a battle between good and evil, and treating it as such just makes people become defensive and entrench themselves in their beliefs. Good ideals simply aren't enough to have a positive impact, and it's far too common to see people whose hearts really are in the right place damaging their own cause rather than helping it.
I would never tell you to stop trying to reduce these injustices, but please be very careful to always consider whether that's what you're actually doing, rather than unintentionally making people even more resistant to progress and equality. It's very easy to do.
You have a point, and ordinarily I would agree with you. However, in this case, this topic is almost never discussed civilly because when the very idea of feminist ideals is mentioned, the backlash is immediate, vocal and vitriolic. The detractors don't start off open to ideas, they are already closed off and kneejerking furiously about fictionalised bogeymen they've created in their own minds. This happens all too often, so that rational and reasonable discussion is impossible from the get go.
So in this case, I maintain the usage of the word 'fight' because it seems to be the only word that makes sense. Now, granted you make a good case for general discussion, and within a proper, rational and sensible discussion that's always the best course of action; but as I said, that isn't where it begins most times.
Thank you for the response though, it has given me food for thought for the future.