I don’t think so. Here’s why:
1. There is still a glass ceiling. Women have difficulty advancing to the highest levels in government, in corporate America, in Academia.
2. Women do not receive equal pay for equal work when they are in the same jobs as men. It is still seventy some cents on the dollar of what men get.
3. Violence against women is rampant in our culture and more the 95% of it is prepetrated by men against women including murders, rapes, and beatings.
I am glad that in my lifetime, because of efforts made by women of my generation and the one before it, girls today can play sports just like boys and have those efforts funded equally by schools; girls can dream of being whatever they want to be when they grow up without being steered into traditional “women’s roles”, such as hairdresser, secretary, teacher or nurse; women who elect to be full-time child care providers and homemakers are valued with an economic impact put on that effort by government measurements and higher societal respect.
That said, it makes me said that young women of today rush to say that they are not “feminists” as if it was a dirty word. Far from respecting the lobbying, the raised consciousness, and the organizing that made the advances possible that they take advantage of today happily, they denigrate the efforts of women who worked hard for those issues and others including reproductive rights.