Cee didn't necessarily disagree with Mrs. Crouch. They were on the same side, really, just arguing from different perspectives. It all boiled down to Cee being passionate about Quidditch and Mrs. Crouch not. Their different waves of feminism were creating a whirlpool.
"Women have been playing Quidditch for quite a while, Mrs. Crouch," Cee said. "You wouldn't know this, but the Holyhead Harpies have been around since 1203. I do not disagree with you that change won't come overnight but I don't understand why you are so passionately against Quidditch in particular. I don't have what it takes to become a healer but I'm not saying we should champion for women's place in the Quidditch industry before the medical one! It isn't a matter of the nature of one's profession, but rather of giving women a choice to do whatever they want, whether it is to play a foolish sport as you call it, or raise fifteen children."
"Women have been playing Quidditch for quite a while, Mrs. Crouch," Cee said. "You wouldn't know this, but the Holyhead Harpies have been around since 1203. I do not disagree with you that change won't come overnight but I don't understand why you are so passionately against Quidditch in particular. I don't have what it takes to become a healer but I'm not saying we should champion for women's place in the Quidditch industry before the medical one! It isn't a matter of the nature of one's profession, but rather of giving women a choice to do whatever they want, whether it is to play a foolish sport as you call it, or raise fifteen children."