It is hip right now, we are told, to be a young woman who supports Bernie. This doesn't mean, though, that it is politically good or that a shouting candidate would be an advantageous choice for our democracy. The excitement about revolution reminds me of former Sen. Harris Wofford's description of "the anti-politics that spread in 1968 and became a wave after Watergate." All of a sudden, women who "feel the Bern" are dismissing Planned Parenthood as a hardened member of establishment politics, just because Bernie said so. These women feel the injustice of 21st-century womanhood. And they claim the need for a revolution, rather than hunker down and continue the long work of figuring out the best way to accomplish feminist progress within our American political system.