> Here's how I get to see it: User solicits help of of male community. > User receives help from 30k reputation female user. Female user nudges > that non-males can answer too. SO moderators edit her answer to leave > the 99% of the text that serves SO's purpose. Male user got what he > came for. Female user discriminated against and silenced. All future > visitors blind/ignorant to the abuse. Note, I am not active on SO, I am a mod at Money.SE. The issue above could happen at any stack. You are fighting the wrong battle. There's misogyny all around us. It's not just worth fighting against, it's imperative that we all take a role in eliminating it. SE aspires to a high signal to noise ratio (STNR). As an example, a widow asks a finance question, and we go to Meta for the fact that good answers also contain the words, "Sorry for your loss" or other words of comfort, which of course are non-financial. Members advocate for a board that's pretty tight on how we compose answers and to aim to post only what might be appropriate for a (published) scholarly work. In that scenario, if a great answer were left and the paragraph about how "my dad died under similar circumstances and I feel your pain" were removed, that wouldn't mean the mod was heartless, or glad the deceased is gone. It's just abiding by the standards of the board. The fact that English tends toward the male pronoun is an issue, no doubt. And it may be appropriate to ask questions about it at English.SE. Certainly appropriate to bring it up in the real world. On SO, the [be nice policy](https://money.stackexchange.com/help/be-nice) serves to keep people treated kindly, but don't confuse STNR with censorship or misogyny. That would be unfair to the members who embrace diversity, and would jump to edit/delete anything offensive.