I'm never going to say there isn't discrimination against females (there's discrimination against /everyone/), but in relation to the post I quoted, I don't think it's to the same extent as homosexuals or mature age students in the uni atmosphere. Sure, there is probably more discrimination against females than males, but I actually wasn't addressing that in my post.
Either way, I'm not convinced. Sure there are a lot of seedy as fuck guys out there and it's a shame a disgusting sexual slur was thrown your way, but I don't think having a room solves any of those issues (ie. men being dickheads). I'm usually in favour of positive discrimination when it comes to women and minority groups (such as Indigenous Australians), but this just over the top. To be completely honest, I interpret it as a sign of admitting some sort of non-existent "inferiority" rather than actively combating the myths, it's sort of like "we need this room because the males outside scare us (in some way)". Clearly that is NOT true given your post, but it's the impression I (and others) get, and it's an impression that's hard to rub off.
And please, all of those things can occur outside of a dedicated "Women's room" (...and they do and have done for years), saying that I implied all of those to be a "waste" is a horrible skewing of my post. And, if your answer to getting more females into high profile jobs is for females already there to hire them, then you're not really any better than men doing the same thing. If I had a solution, that would certainly not be part of it.
I don't really buy into the parliamentarian debate. We've had a female PM (who my family voted for as a member of her electorate), we've had a female deputy PM, we've had a female Governor General, and so forth. Sure, we haven't had an "equal amount" yet, but that will change with time. And in fact, I'm not sure we even need to have an "equal" gender balance in parliament, we just need the best people to put their hands up for the job. Hopefully given the high profile success of late, more women will put their hands up and we'll have some better representation (ad surely more can be done to ensure this happens). But we don't need to "aim" for a statistical figure when it comes to elected positions imo, that defeats the purpose of the election.