You realize we grew up in this world, right?
We're post-feminist children. We do not come from the perspective of some old guy from the 50's, we are the children abandoned by our parents.
If you can relate then you'll get it, if you want to be argumentative about the pain other people went through then explain how you can understand better the struggles we have to deal with.
Calculating the future from the past will often lead to having an unpopular opinion. Finding a way to turn that unpopular opinion into a popular one is hard work since most people only learn when they felt the negative consequences of either their own choices or the choices of people with power over them, themselves.
That's why people trying to warn other people often sound isolated and even crazy until finally the message makes it through our thick skulls.
Either way, people will always contribute to society in a number of ways, nothing is ever black and white, but some choices are better than others and if your "contribution" leads to destruction then it wasn't really contributing now was it?
This discussion is far more important than any other since directly impacts at least 2 more generations. Nobody needs to do anything for women, but we desperately need to do something for families.
Women in the workforce just means that much more pain and destruction for everyone.
Maybe because people empathized with his innocence and subsequent execution.
They probably felt like the fate of their own lives are decided by outside forces against their will when they're just trying to help - many people viewed the gorilla's action as trying to help.
He's a sort of inverse Floyd:
A boy fell into a gorilla enclosure at a zoo, when Harambe the gorilla grabbed the boy and then was shot. It was all recorded on video and uploaded causing global outrage. Many people felt that he did not have to be killed and he became a sort of symbol of the time.
But in The Simarillion...