Rationalism should not be confused with rationality, nor with rationalization.
-Wikipedia article on rationalism
I frequently see people using rationalism in place of rationality. Usually other commenters understand them, however I believe that using the word rationality is superior. The Less Wrong tag line is "A community blog devoted to refining the art of human rationality". On the other hand, rationalism is the philosophical term for a very different epistemological position. Furthermore, -the -ism suffix has some undesirable connotations.
Political interests do not have to be intrinsically opposed to have conflict. It is in the interests of feminism to target some territories in concept-space to colonize to further it's goals---such as asserting an epistemic fact about something to do with sex the belief of which will strengthen feminism. "Traditional rationalism" will also claim territories in such a way. When those claims overlap there is the potential for conflict. "Traditional rationalism" will have different priorities regarding assertions made on that subject than "feminism" and so the natural escalation for either side is to " are anti-".
It is not hard to think of examples of epistemic claims about subjects which would necessarily offend significant elements of one or the other of those groups but which are required by the other. Of course I will not give examples here because that will necessarily be offensive to at least one of said groups. (I support your-side.)
I only just understood this reply today. Thank you. (Edit: by which I mean, there are related lessons I learned today)