Well, second-wave feminism wasn't the same as first-wave, and third-wave isn't the same as second-wave either. I think it's natural for everyone to think that the way we did things when we were young, is the way young people should do it now. But that feeling that we have, doesn't mean that young people's practice of feminism is not as good. Back in the '80s, transphobia was just about celebrated - it was way beyond accepted. And while exclusion of minorities is still a very serious problem in the women's movement in the US today, at least there's a lot more consciousness of intersectionality than there was even five years ago.

So, no. As a member of one of the first majority-female classes at one of the nation's larger law schools, I know that the many micro- and macro-aggressions I experienced at work were very different from what, say, Sandra Day O'Connor experienced. I don't take for granted the fact that no one questioned my right to take the LSAT or apply to law school. Misogyny looks different now from what it looked like 30 years ago, and it looked different then from what it looked like 30 years before that, but it's still here, and I give today's young feminists credit and self-determination.