The New York Times last week ran a controversial column and podcast bearing the headline: Did Women Ruin the Workplace? The piece, created by conservative columnist Ross Douthat, included an interview with two women authors, Helen Andrews and Leah Libresco Sargeant, that explored the idea that liberal feminist women have “feminized” America’s institutions, “driving men and masculine virtues out.” That, according to the piece, has forced women to suppress their nature and fit into workplaces designed for men. Rather than calling that misogyny, the trio suggest that “wokeness” and “feminization” are the same thing, and that they’re bad for both men and women. She then used the MeToo movement as an example of feminism run amok, as men like Aziz Ansari were “canceled” for, as she put it, “a bad date.” The piece has caused an uproar among women on social media and regular media. The women of Vanity Fair published a humorous takedown of the piece and many women took to social media to call on women to continue ruining the workplace with their demands of equal pay and punishment for sexual harassment.