Yeah, I get the sense that her experience made the misogyny much more obvious and/or her lens on things misses the parts of that experience that were likely trans-specific. Or perhaps she subscribes to the argument that ultimately misogyny is the root of ciscentrism and heterocentrism? (I.e. that if misogyny is what locks us into binary gender boxes and defines what those things are and how to do them "right," it not only oppresses cis women but also causes the policing of the boundaries of those boxes, as part of holding up cis male privilege.) *shrug*
no subject