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Many thanks friend, you have no clue how often that happens =D.
Above all else, I think it's important that we state the problems that are plaguing men as well as women and treat them equally and in order of importance. That is the core of feminism, women just want to be treated equally as men. However, the media has to come up with stories that sell, and oppression against men doesn't necessarily grab your attention as much as those against women or minorities.
On a lot of the feminist blogs and other stuff I see, terms like 'toxic masculinity' are commonplace. It is okay to define something like that around the male gender, but there is no way 'toxic femininity' would ever get used in any context on the same blog. Bad power structure = 'Patriarchy', etc. I understand where it came from - at one point men really did have most of the power and women very little.
However, shaming and guilting one entire sex while raising the other above rebuke doesn't seem very effective. I think both parties would be more willing to participate if it was framed around both sexes.
Right now, I think a lot of men come across this kind of stuff, see the way arguments are framed and how extreme some of the language in arguments is, (or see that they are told they can never get 100% consent and even 'yes' still means maybe) and roll their eyes and move on. I mean there are real issues there, but I am not going to get engaged in something about rape culture if the language used vaguely damns the fact I was born with a penis and equates me with rapists.
It should be about egalitarianism and these problems won't go anywhere (including those that largely affect women) without engaging and involving everyone (including men) in the solutions, no matter who/what is or was at fault.