While I quite agree that words like “discriminate” are overly used and often incorrectly, I make use of the word in the context of a definition such as:
make an unjust or prejudicial distinction in the treatment of different categories of people, especially on the grounds of race, sex, or age.
Being prejudiced is normal for all individuals. We usually have our preferences, for example, in the age and sex of a romantic partner and such preference can be defined as ‘prejudicial distinction’.
As a society that has forced feminism’s concept of equality upon us, and done so much damage in doing so, it must be acceptable and reasonable to demand true equality, and nowhere can this be more clearly defined than equality under the law. To make unjust or prejudicial distinction in law or in legal practice on the grounds of sex is discrimination and I use the word precisely because feminist organisations and feminist politicians are using ‘discrimination' to claim that women are treated unfairly under the law, and that there are laws against women, when the obverse is the case.