The band Yes.
And right there you just torpedoed your own credibility (assuming you had any left) because:
1. You understand nothing about 3rd wave feminism, you're going strictly off of hearsay.
2. Third wave has given way to intersectionalism. Had you bothered doing the homework, you would have already known that.
3. You're still effectively arguing for technocracy over human rights.
Technological advancements give us the leeway to implement or more fully realize human rights, and the free time to analyze other ones that we may deserve but not yet have implemented. I don't see why in a more advanced future it wouldn't be a right for everyone to have a house and food and belongings because technology allows such things to be manufactured without much cost any longer for example. Hell, we may even have human rights to immortality at some point. I'd love for that to be a human right.
Intersectionality is a limitation that tries to put people in boxes. In actuality people are infinitely more complex than the categories which intersectionality allows for. It's pretending to be more cognizant of the individual circumstances of people but in effect all it does is elevate a certain small part of each person (stuff like race and gender and sexuality and general "privilege points"), just treating each person as a fully different and individualized being is way more cognizant of those person-specific circumstances that we have to adapt how we treat that person based on. Instead of having a twitter bio worth of information suffice for determining how we have to perceive someone, we now have to actually do the hard work of meeting them and getting to know them and forming an individual impression of them and using that information to calibrate our attitude towards them. I see it as totally dehumanizing to ignore all of a person's being outside of the few bits of them that intersectionality elevates to god status at the expense of the majority of who that person truly is.
For me, what things people choose to do in their fun time, such as being a gamer or reading books or what have you, is infinitely more important about who they are than the privilege points they have or lack. If I see a new person in my locals I won't ask them who they fuck, I'll ask them what game they play. If you can't see why such a thing would be more informative then you're indeed that bored funless person who only has their happenstance identities and nothing else to define themselves by. We're not all like you. But if you tried to treat those things as being of the same gravitas as someone's race or what have you the intersectionality people would laugh at you. This is enough to tell me that they don't actually care about learning about people's lives.