The first part is that there is more that can be legally done to protect the falsely accused and that such laws are quite common. Having someone, for example, get a "falsely accused" mark that protects them from action from work and universities... would soften the blow.
Then shit blew up and it rapidly became a case of men claiming to have as much or more experience of sexism, and being discriminated against as badly as women. A lot of horrible, horrible arguments were made. All of it, in effect, to justify keeping women's experiences out of the thread.
We honestly went through this. No one was saying that. That was Rolepg constantly pulling argument out of what people have said that wasn't there.
People pointed out that yes, when talking about women experiencing discrimination, women's stories of experiencing discrimination are relevant, while men's stories of not experiencing discrimination against women are less relevant.
Is it? That was the major question.
The conclusion it was left at is that women are natural experts on sexism and that men aren't.
It is by constantly bringing up male-targeted sexism in discussions (about, say, female-targeted sexism in video games) that you "play the suffering Olympics" in the first place
Then just acknowledge it and move on. It doesn't belittle women. Or even acknowledge it and say it doesn't change the issue.
It would be like a police officer in a criminal harassment conversation saying "Well we police get beaten up by criminals all the time". "Yes you do. Now about police brutality".
ALL THE PROBLEMS of this has come from "Well men have issues too" being met with "HOW DARE YOU BELITTLE WOMEN AND THEIR ISSUES" met with "But I didn't mean that, I am just saying this"... "And Yet you continue to belittle them"
Want to know why men's issues keep coming up in conversations on women's issues? Because it is ultimately a conversation on equality. As well male issues DIRRECTLY related to female issues. For example how are men depicted in videogames informs how women are depicted. It is why Anita talks on length about how men are depicted and the differences between, for example, a male protagonist and female damsel (but I honestly think she dropped the ball on that... because there is a large difference between male and female damsels)
No, it came from the "men shouldn't casually disregard women's stories of sexism just because they themselves do not notice it" talk
It started off that way, and then it immediately devolved into "men's opinion on sexism is lesser of that then women" rather then just accepting that everyone has an opinion.
Neither side had moral superiority in this conversation.