None of which changes the fact that despite the occasional category where men are worse off than women we are still in general much better off.
I'm not quite sure what it is you're arguing for Pez. I think it's that there should be people campaigning to deal with this in the same way people are campaigning against female inequality. Thing is there are people doing this. They're called feminists, and they're doing it as part of the fight against inequality in general.
There's a whole generation of feminists that haven't learned yet that they're supposed to care for everyone. If no one speaks up to tell this young generation that feminism is about everyone, they're not going to learn. Pay attention to what young feminists are saying, and you'll hear many saying "men's problems are their own, we're not here to do anything for men". They're a small part of the feminist movement, but they're the future of the movement unless they're swayed otherwise. I bring up stuff like this because I consider myself a feminist, and I want my sons to be able to consider themselves feminists as well.
Except, whenever you point out that men do have disadvantages, you get labeled as being against feminism, which I most certainly am not. All I wanted to do was correct a common misconception that I've seen going around. Namely that society doesn't teach hatred of men, when we clearly do. We teach all sorts of negative stereotypes about men, and then teach that those negative stereotypes are reasons to hate men. It's not universal that everyone believes those messages, no more than everyone believes society when it tells us to hate women, but obviously enough young men believe those awful lies that there is a lot of self-hatred among men. Which I think is very clearly expressed in the problems that LittleSin sees in the MRA groups, namely that they don't build each other up. They express hatred for their own gender by not reaching out to each other, and reinforcing the negative stereotypes that keep them isolated. It's a selfish, angry, depressed way of going about things, and it's the way far too many men are taught to treat other men.