And I am hoping that the changes I have seen regarding attitudes towards men and women in high tech, and their family lives, persist and continue where it is no longer odd if dads take paternity leaves or spend time with their kids and women are not seen as inferior to their male counterparts - and maybe that will translate to the children not seeing STEM as a boy/girl thing but rather, just as an option that anyone can pursue if interested.
I do think men are better than women at some things on average (chess, programming) and that women are better at some things than men (verbal ability, including foreign languages). It's strange that an assertion about being better in a single domain on average is treated as an assertion of general "superiority". That would only make sense if we agreed that the abilities to play chess or program a computer are the only important ones. They are not, of course.