No one is asking you to. But if I choose to address certain issues I think matter categorically more to women, why should that annoy you?
Oh, it doesn't.
But when I pick up a "feminist reading of the gospels", for example, I think "hoo boy, here we go". If we want to examine the role of women in the gospels, or use the gospels in conjunction with archaeology etc. to discuss the role of women in the Ancient Near East, then how about "the role of women in the gospels"?
Let's face it, feminism has tons of baggage.
I remember when Annie Proulx was asked by a feminist scholar after a reading why she didn't feature women characters more prominently, her answer was "I write whatever the **** I want to write".
Which was, of course, the only honest answer.
Like I said, it gets tiresome to view the world always through one lens, whether that be feminist theory, queer theory, or what have you.
Not to discount your personal experience but I find you adopting the typical stereotype of what feminism is about rather than more carefully evaluating the issues.
But the issues are not what I dislike.
It is precisely the "stereotypical" aspects of it that turn me off. Keep in mind that just because something is stereotypical doesn't mean it doesn't exist. I find, for example, that the "stereotypical" complaints about education courses are spot on.
Do you think such things as human sex trafficking, the risk of dying in childbirth in Afghanistan, or something as simple as unequal pay for equal work (note I said equal work there, not gender based wage statistics) are both feminist issues and humanist issues or only the latter?
They are in part the first, entirely the latter. Boys, after all, are trafficked as well, and having a wife and child (or daughter and grandchild, or mother and sibling) die during childbirth is a tragedy for husbands and fathers and sons as well.