the vast majority of men as individuals are innocent of any wrongdoing in this regard and are not opposing sex equality (and even in the instances where they are, not in a meaningful way).
I'm not sure this is true. When people have privilege in society, they often don't
realize it, and that in itself is harmful, as they'll misjudge the nature of society and the character/worth of those around them.
Also, prejudice is, well, pretty insidious. Even people who aren't necessarily "sexist" still have likely been brought up with traditional gender roles, stereotypes, and expectations in mind, and those affect how people think even if they don't realize it. And that's the problem: Most people
don't give the subject very much thought, or critically analyze how they view gender (or similar issues).
After all, if this weren't a very pervasive problem, then why is it that there are still so few women in engineering and advanced math, and why a whole slew of other prescribed expectations are still in place and going strong? Sexism affects people in a whole lot of ways, both small and large. It's important not to paint the average man (or woman) as a sexist, but to educate them and get them to think about the subject and how they fit into it in their own, small ways.
I meant the psycho ones. Obviously. Do you really think I'm dumb enough to make a generalisation like that on purpose in this thread?
I don't think anyone has a right to say it's on purpose, but you certainly still did it. If you say "X are Y" people aren't going to assume you mean "Specific group A out of X are Y". You really need to be more precise in your language when talking about these things, because people
will take what you say at face value, especially when your posts are short enough that there's little context from which to infer things. For that matter, this is a more minor thing, but saying things like "the psycho ones" doesn't help either. We don't know how you define that, so you might as well be saying "I meant the ones I don't like".