How do you reconcile the rubbish you write while trying to pass it off as truth?
I actually, read your link below concerning the point you were making about there was a timeframe when they didn’t spend their whole lives in politics on the tax payers dime. When your Democratic Great Grandfather served a two year term and went back to his normal life “as a Stone Mason”.
Which had no connection whatsoever to you wanting to go back to the negatives times when women were being treated “in that list” being used against you.
Term of Office: 1/7/1913 to 1/4/1915
Party: Democratic
Committees:
Game and Fish
Labor and Labor Legislation
Roads and Bridges
State Fair
State Prison and Reformatory
Workmens Compensation
Your post to Paradoxical ~ (another poster responded to your post concerning the subject

)
“Like my Democratic great grandfather who served in the MN House of Representatives. He served a two year term, gave to his country, and then went back to his normal life.”
https://www.lrl.mn.gov/legdb/fulldetail?id=14429
Knowing you ~ If, you lived in the timeframe

you would have been marching with those women. You are for Women’s Rights. Including Girls Rights.
Beginning in the mid-19th century, several generations of woman suffrage supporters lectured, wrote, marched, lobbied, and practiced civil disobedience to achieve what many Americans considered a radical change in the Constitution – guaranteeing women the right to vote. Some suffragists used...
www.archives.gov
Note

emocrat President Woodrow Wilson was in opposition to a federal woman suffrage amendment.
“During World War I, suffragists tried to embarrass President Woodrow Wilson into reversing his opposition and supporting a federal woman suffrage amendment. But in the heated patriotic climate of wartime, such tactics met with hostility and sometimes violence and arrest. Frustrated with the suffrage movement’s leadership, Alice Paul had broken with the National American Woman Suffrage Association (NAWSA) to form the National Woman’s Party (NWP). It employed more militant tactics to agitate for the vote.”
“Most notably, the NWP organized the first White House picket in U.S. history on January 10, 1917. They stood vigil at the White House, demonstrating in silence six days a week for nearly three years. The "Silent Sentinels" let their banners – comparing the President to Kaiser Wilhelm II of Germany – speak for them. Many of the sentinels were arrested and jailed in deplorable conditions. Some incarcerated women went on hunger strikes and endured forced feedings. The Sentinels' treatment gained greater sympathy for women's suffrage, and the courts later dismissed all charges against them.”