Congrats. You linked to something where I am bolding a part of your reply that deals with Mormons and addressing that portion of it. Never got into Catholics or JWs.
Because Catholics and JWs don't make up part of the general culture around them?
However, reading it this morning, you were responding to a point I made about people on this message board, and not the general populace, so I did over-generalize your response in that way. My fault on that score.
Would I tell a son to "woman up"? No, of course not. But I do not tell my daughters to "man up".
Do you tell your daughters to "woman up"? Would you tell your son to "man up"? Do Mormons refrain from using the second phrase on boys? If so, then ignore the next paragraph.
If not, think about the message being given. When you tell your son to "man up", you putting forth the notion of manhood as a worthy goal, By contrast, in not saying "woman up", you don't set the same sort of notion for your daughters. One anyone given day, it's not a big deal, but over time, all of your kids, nephews, etc. hear this difference, and not just from you, but from almost every other adult they know. You think the message doesn't get through? Try this: say "woman up" to your daughters (at the appropriate time, of course) in front of other people, see how they react.