I did. Pretty hard to be more clear.
Maybe I missed it. Could you please point me to the post?
Just re-read my post. How does ONE or TWO women presidents or premiers change "ALMOST ALL men?" It doesn't. Why do you insist on repeating this nonsense?
I'm not even talking to you about the States. I'm talking about a different country altogether, where it's not just 'one or two presidents or premiers'. The government is heavily influenced by female politicians. Your claim was that more female representation in Congress means more gender equality. My example was to show you that that is not a fact. It might just mean that gender inequality is not a factor among a certain segment of females.
The two countries and cultures are very different and one would look at different measures of gender inequality in each country.
When you read the PEW report, you said this -
The almost all white male leadership of both countries where women are relatively more liberated than in the countries with the worst conditions for women is evidence women have not achieved sufficient equality even in countries where conditions have improved.
If I may paraphrase this, you are saying that women in the US and UK are more liberated than some of the other countries on the list. But the 'almost all white male leadership' is evidence that even in these countries, women do not have sufficient equality.' What you are doing here is directly connecting more leadership positions -> more equality.
Then when I presented India as an example where women hold multiple leadership positions and yet there is gender inequity, you say that the two cultures are very different?
Is it not a more plausible explanation that women in leadership positions may not say much at all about the gender equality situation in a country?
Would you say none of the leaders in India were white therefore there is no ethnic inequality in India?
A completely pointless question, but just for fun, the current leader of the ruling party is actually
an Italian who took Indian citizenship.
India has hundreds of years of all male leadership. You used an arbitrary cutoff.

Hundreds of years? India gained its independence in 1947. There have been 14 prime ministerships since then. 3 of them were by women candidates. It's ok to not know something. Not ok to just wing it.
It's even worse here. Now you are trying to say all one needs is a single measure to rate gender inequality. The lack of women in leadership positions can be demonstrated with many different examples. Taking a single one, President, as if that is all one needs to prove change, is not reasonable. Taking a single woman President out of almost 50 and claiming that evens things up is ludicrous.
I'm not sure if you are having trouble parsing my arguments. This is not at all what I said. YOU brought up the point that US has not had a woman President. Hence, I pointed out similar positions in India. You said that more women in parliament means more rights for women. So again I pointed you to India. I'm not saying that the one position shows the gender situation. I'm merely trying to show you that it does not. You were the one who connected 'presence in parliament' to 'equality'. See the two following comments, one from you., and one from me -
Skeptic Ginger
The almost all white male leadership...SNIP... is evidence women have not achieved sufficient equality even in countries where conditions have improved.
Dipayan
Which is why I disagree with your statement that the appointment of a woman premier/strong representation in parliament is somehow evidence of sufficient gender equality.