I love how you've climbed down from your original statement; you were complaining about how people only accepted the inclusion of 'straight white males', and now it's just 'white males'.
And besides, that's a load of nonsense. As I already pointed out in my last response, the reason less people are not objecting to leader choices like Phillip II is because he was actually an important and successful leader. The reason people think he is a good leader choice is nothing to do with him being a 'straight white male'. Similarly, Cleopatra being woman is not a factor in people's complaints about her.
If someone says that the inclusion of Cleopatra is bad, and that it is pandering to women, that does not mean that they think her inclusion is bad because she is a woman. That is not the same, and that seems to be where you are going wrong.
Right, but you did not quote the OP, so I had no idea why you were brining all of this up all of a sudden.
Firstly, so what if they don't claim that? I don't care whether they claim their choices to be the best leaders of their civilizations, I don't have to want the same things from leader choices that they do. But also, they actually do seem to be claiming Catherine de Medici to be one of France's greatest leaders; she 'paved the way for France becoming a strong centralised state'.
Anyway, leaders like Trajan, Qin Shi Huang and Peter the great were clearly chosen in part due to them having been very important figures in the histories of their Civilizations, all being arguably among the best leaders of their nations. In terms of personality, Trajan is definately not the first Roman emperor that comes to mind. So, when leaders like these are chosen based on merit, why do they then choose leaders like Catherine de Medici? You might think her to be one of France's greatest leaders, but I'm fairly sure that would you in a minority.