Same thing, especially in an environment where people fashion the rules as deterministic and objective.
1) "other problems exist in an unsolved state" is not a very a good argument for "let's not solve this problem". 2) enh, Chesterton's Fence, but sure, if process can reasonably be made better, argue for it
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but maybe probably don't start from a position of reading misogynist bias into process massively overdetermined by clear non-bias factors, because that's basically just a ginned up threat and that's a shitty way to deal with people
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which is not to say that asking "are there feasible ways we could tweak process to avoid creating the *appearance* of bias that some people perceived in this situation?" is unreasonable
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