I don't know. Don't feel like he's responsible for things like...
Here's an example of why I have a problem with it: FBI's height requirement thing. (re: You're a girl and you can't get a job you want because you're too short. And also, kind of, because you're a girl.)
Her dad tells her she's too short and the FBI guy tells her she's too short. The FBI requirement is, in reality (for women) 5'0".
So now, Babs is shorter, too? She used to be 5'6" or 5'7", but now, for this story, to show her pluckily fighting back against all of the men who want to keep her down, the story makes her short, too. Or just completely ignores the actual height requirement policy.
To me, it feels like a list of contrived elements to provide story tension, instead of real, more-complicated-to-write, current problems people face. And the problems that she faces in this story are all traditionally feminine coded problems, that have to do with hurt feelings and feelings and relationships and self-esteem through identification with self-image. Versus more time doing. Being a detective. Fighting crime. Which in the end, makes me feel like it might be a little anti-feminist.
I just about lost it when Alfred and Robin gassed her and stripped her mask and left her unconscious in a locked car.
I think story devices like that diminish Batman, Robin, Alfred and Gordon, as well as Barbara.