Lexicus
Deity
I don't think this is a conclusion you can arrive at without a lot of dubious speculation. Same as most discourses on 'human nature'. It certainly smacks of social evolutionary thinking, which is controversial and tends to beg the question.
It's not a conclusion I believe is accurate, either, but the point is not the accuracy of the conclusion, the point is the consequences of different sets of circumstances for what must be done to get rid of the patriarchy.
The difference being capitalist society is a rather modern thing. We know a lot about the what happened back then, just a few hundred years ago at most. We don't know nearly as much about human societies thousands of years ago. Even if we do, the chain of causation we have to construct to modern times is so long that it becomes as uncertain as mere conjecture.
Capitalism has deeper roots than that. Indeed I think looking at ancient history is pretty useful for understanding capitalism too.
Not being interested in discussing whether patriarchy originated in hunter gatherer tribes does not mean assuming that it "has always existed, will always exist".
It's one thing to be uninterested in discussing it yourself. Instead you saw the need to tell other people not to discuss it.
Nietzsche was obsessed with delving into the 'genealogy' our moral systems at one point (i.e. he built an interesting but rather questionable narrative on how we came to believe what is right and wrong). It's a reference to that.
Yes, I am aware of the reference...my question is where I said anything about delving into the genealogy of patriarchy is required for anyone to dismantle it.