Acharya Prashant explains that true feminism is when a woman stops taking being a female as her primary identity. He argues that as long as a woman is fighting for her rights as a woman, she is not liberated. True liberation for a woman is to be liberated from the very concept that she is a woman. If she continues to identify with being a woman, her genetic conditioning, biological impulses, and physical drives will continue to rule her, making it difficult to achieve her potential as a human being. The objective should be the person's welfare, which lies in liberation from body-identification. The speaker critiques the idea that women should become more like men to be liberated, calling this a "double bondage" where one is biologically a woman and ideologically a man, which leads to more conflict. He also describes the notion of "embracing womanhood" or "motherhood" as extremely toxic and anti-liberation. He states that if feminism is true, it would seek to liberate the woman, and in that liberation lies her empowerment. The woman is trapped by the man because, as a woman, she aims for safety, security, a nest, and kids. These wants, he clarifies, are not truly hers but arise from the female body, from physical nature (Prakriti). These biological wants are what trap her. If a woman stops wanting these things, a man cannot trap or enslave her. He emphasizes that these desires are not truly hers but are the wants of the body. A necessary mark of a true feminist, he asserts, is not being dependent on anyone's money, especially a male partner's. He criticizes so-called leading feminists who earn nothing and practice their feminism while thriving on their male partner's money. Ultimately, the goal is to transcend biological roles and identities, not to empower or embrace them. This requires disidentification from the body and its inherent tendencies.