[3] The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy refers to Wendy McElroy, Joan Kennedy Taylor, Cathy Young, Rita Simon, Katie Roiphe, Diana Furchtgott-Roth, Christine Stolba, and Christina Hoff Sommers as equity feminists.
In this text, Sommers summarizes how the aim of equity feminism is to attain economic, educational, and political equality of opportunity.
[11] Steven Pinker, an evolutionary and cognitive psychologist, linguist, and popular science author, identifies himself as an equity feminist, which he defines as "a moral doctrine about equal treatment that makes no commitments regarding open empirical issues in psychology or biology".
mentions that a way to help all their children understand the concept of equity is to teach them all basic chores around the house to maintain this balance in the future with their own family.
[19] Louis Schubert et al. claims "principles of equity feminism remain in the vision of the vast majority of women in the United States".
[23] That year it was introduced in congress before being approved by the U.S. House of Representatives in March 1972 that would give both women and men the constitutional right to equity.
[25] The battle for equity becomes political as many argue women and other groups who are considered oppressed are denied the same opportunities of cis-gender white males.
If there is no political push for a feminist equitable society, it would create a statement that women are lesser than men and don't deserve the same treatment regardless of education or social class.