Thank you all for welcoming me to the forum! Regarding Raquel and @Angelina 's comments on the use of "misogynistic," I think one cannot merely look at the dictionary definition of the word. When you talk to scholars of certain social sciences in the American academia about things like abortion bans for example, they might call such policies "misogynistic." Through the lenses of an evangelical Christian republican in Biloxi, however, they might call such policies "humanitarian." All I'm trying to say is that nowadays words like "misogyny" have much broader and looser definitions, and views that are somewhat traditional might be spinned into being the most misogynistic thing ever. It's hard to think of a word that represents a "different but equal" view of men and women. Perhaps "complementarianism" will work, but that word has a Judeo-Christian undertone to it, and I'm not that religious.
Disclaimer: The previous example does not represent my politics.