She has always been the queen of liberal feminism, certain that the kind of sexual liberation that was known for a time as “raunch culture” was entirely compatible with female equality, seemingly unaware that this may well feel liberating for young women, but for older women, not so much. Madonna is a more inspiring figure now, as she declares the sexual worth of women in their 50s, than she was when declaring the sexual worth of a woman aged 28. That never seemed terribly radical to me.
The trouble with female sexual worth...is that it’s seen as a youthful gift of nature, with transient value.
And yet it won't struck as hard because the interested ones (women at 50's) don't seem to receptive to this, to get the message, discuss and act upon it. But she's doing her part.