I prefer to judge people and organisations by their actions, not their words.
So, even today, the largest christian denomination still refuses to allow women to be priest, bishops, cardinals, pope etc. They continue to institutionally discriminate in a direct manner against women. And it is therefore unsurprising that the RCC's teaching (which is, of course, overwhelmingly developed by man) aims to deny fundamental rights of women over their bodies and reproduction.
Oh - and although the CofE is certainly better than the RCC it still doesn't provide full equality for women - parishes are able to refuse the jurisdiction of a woman bishop.
This about this in terms of any other organisation - the RCC position is like a company saying that no-one on the board or in any senior position can be a woman. The CofE is the equivalent of an employee in a company being able to refuse being line managed by a woman. We'd think those positions to be deeply unethical, highly discriminatory and flat out illegal. Yet we allow religious organisations to perpetuation such discrimination with impunity.
The designation of specific priests is but a tradition. I tolerate the idea of a full time clergy but for me it isn't the heart of the matter and throughout church history the designated priest I think has done the job with the support of mainly local women parishioners. So a male priesthood is an ever so slightly a bit of a sham.
Tertullian funnily enough joined a church, the montanist where woman had headed the church for all his apparent misogyny.
The ability to refuse female bishops is I think a transition but I hardly think that satisfies the desire for instant vengeance on the church.
But the perhaps the biggest single mocker on the primacy of a male priesthood is the biblical concept of a priesthood of all believers.
First Epistle of Peter, 2:9:
But you are not like that, for you are a chosen people.
You are royal priests, a holy nation, God’s very own possession. As a result, you can show others the goodness of God, for he called you out of the darkness into his wonderful light.
In terms of denying women rights Churches can only campaign for that and it is usually rejected in secular democracies. I am not one of those who are disturbed that there are people who do not agree with abortion laws although I am rather intrigued about how people like you are going to make everyone in society think like you.