And when the Hebrew men had decided to not have children any more because they did not want to bring children into the cruel world of slavery, it was the Hebrew women who convinced them that they had to continue to have children.
But it was also Hebrew women who assisted Pharaoh with male infanticide:
"Because the midwives feared G-D, he gave them great families of their own"
Exodus 1:21The Rashbam and Tur explain: The literal words in the Pasuk are "And he made them houses". Pharaoh built government-funded birth clinics in order to circumvent the midwives... Initially, one would think that he forced the women to visit those clinics. But if he could not force the women to throw their boys into the river, how did he force the women to give birth in his clinics?
The answer is simple: Pharaoh built the first Planned-Parenthood in history. Pharaoh lured Jewish women away from traditional childbirth and into the 'clinics', just as women today are lured into Planned Parenthood, and only when he was able to gain a substantial amount of patients was he able to strictly enforce male infanticide, because of most of the misled women in a given Egyptian neighborhood were visiting this clinic, a lone righteous Jewish women giving birth at home would be easily detected by the Egyptian authorities.
So women were not all 'peaches and roses' as we are lead to believe.
Regarding living inside Israel, if a well-known Rabbi from a congregation would cause detriment to his congregation by moving to Israel (As I have pointed out has happened many times before in the past), he most certainly should not do so. The reason is obvious, and I should also point out that his caused the dissolution of many communities as well. If you want me to post the letters from Igrot Kodesh, I will gladly do so. It is blind to naïvely quote Halacha from the Talmud. Open up a Shulchan Aruch and read the inyanim regarding living in Eretz Yisrael there and you will see that the Halacha is not black and white as you would have everybody believe.
Also, you translated the page number in the Talmud wrong. It's not 100:72, but Kuf Yud
Amud Bet - 110:b not
Ayin Bet. Keep in mind that those who wrote the Talmud lived
outside of Eretz Yisrael because they were forced to. The Rebbe declared that all Yidden in the post-holocaust generation are considered Tinok Shenishba, a concept in the Gemara which refers to a captured toddler. If someone cannot move to Israel for whatever reason, he is obviously not sinning in any way.
You also neglected to quote the text that immediately follows it on 111:a
"R. Zera was evading Rab Judah because he desired to go up to the Land of Israel while Rab Judah had expressed [the following view:] Whoever goes up from Babylon to the Land of Israel transgresses a positive commandment, for it is said in Scripture, They shall be carried to Babylon, and there shall they be, until the day that I remember them, saith the Lord."
Does this mean that a Jew who lives in Babylon is forbidden from leaving Babylon? So Iraqi Jews and such were forbidden from making Aliyah?