Definitely not, women work differently to men, yes we're all human but there's a reason some things women are better in and some things men are better in.
Same question that I asked the last person to make that statement of faith - state what you think they are and why you think they're inherent rather than socialised.
Obviously, I know that you can't because there is no reasoning behind your belief - it's a faith-based position. It's a rhetorical question to demonstrate that to anyone who might be reading and hasn't realised you have nothing behind your belief.
I say that a person's sex is only genuinely relevant to specific jobs in sex work, modelling and acting. If you think any different, here's your chance to show your evidence. Remember that you need to prove absolute differences, not trends, and that you must show that they are inherent and not socialised.
I'll bring up Mary Somerville again as an example of the difference. Her parents were genuinely worried about her health because she studied maths, natural philosophy (combined sciences, essentially) and classical ancient languages. At the time, it was quite widely believed in Britain (and many other places) that subjects like that were so masculine that it was dangerous for a female person to study them and impossible for her to learn them to any great degree. Her parents, like you, believed that male and female people were inherently different and therefore suited to different things. As a result, they were genuinely worried that their daughter had a strong interest in manly things. They weren't oppressing her by not hiring tutors in those subjects for her - they were protecting her. They didn't think female people were inferior, just different. Like you do.
Mary Somerville was determined and brilliant and she had help from various people who didn't think the same way (for example, one of her uncles taught her Latin when she told him she wanted to learn it). She also had her own money, enough to do what she wanted. So she became a noted mathematician and scientist anyway.
But how many women who could have done, didn't?
Any, and I mean
any, ideas about sexed and gendered restrictions have a self-fulfilling, stifling effect. They're unfair and wrong, especially when they're presented as being sexed, i.e. absolute. Any time that anyone says that people of different sexes have different abilities, they are coercing people, especially children, into conforming to those restrictions.