What women want is to cherry pick all the nicest jobs for themselves by calling the sexist card while leaving all the hard jobs to the men. It's hard to respect that.
It is hard to respect someone who uses generalities to make their point, Angst. I've spent a good portion of my life in traditionally male-dominated jobs - in the early days I was often the only woman on the crew. Sexism played no part in my acceptance as an employee. Rather knowledge of the job I was applying for, a willingness to take on any task required of me, a good strong work ethic and an ability to work along side men not used to having a woman on the crew and who had some rather interesting ideas about it. I never got a promotion that I hadn't earned by good hard work and I was paid exactly the same as anyone else in my position.
There are many women with similar stories who, I know, would scoff at the idea of using the sexist card to get a job, knowing full well that once you were in the door you better know how to produce, so why bother.