Given that our culture is and always has been sexist, all guys are raised with some level of sexism internalised. How much of that is acted on and fed back into that culture is in no small part dependent on how often we recognise and confront it, within ourselves or others.
As do women, mind. Double standards are indeed internalized in our culture, but blaming an individual gender for it is well... counter intuitive. Don't blame groups for the acts of an individual; blame individuals.
In other words, don't point to a random man you've never met and say "he's got internalized sexism in his consciousness!" because that's pretty damn prejudicial.
And somehow every time people try to point out sexist biases against women a bunch of guys make it about them and how they obviously aren't misogynistic, but those feminist bitches keep saying that they are.
I don't usually see this. I DO see a lot of calling out hypocrisy, but that's due to the nature of what we're discussing. When we're talking about inequalities and a group's concerns being ignored because of something arbitrary like gender, the irony is hard to ignore if they're
also ignoring other people's concerns due to the same reason.
Is pointing out hypocrisy a tactic to marginalize the other person's opinion?
A good chance of that, yeah. Then again, the usual response is an equal attempt of marginalization. I don't think we'll ever get past this stupid part of the debate until we stop making sexism be "about women" or "about men." It's about both. You can't ignore how it affects both sides of the coin, and this is true for
every issue. Stop caring whether it's a man or women being hurt or given an unfair advantage, and start caring that they were hurt or given that advantage because of their gender, as
that is the problem.
As a side note, we need to start seeing the "negative"
and "positive" outcomes of sexism as equally heinous. Ex: Consciously opening the door for someone because they're a women is JUST AS SEXIST as consciously
not opening the door for them because they're a women (though the latter's a bigger jerkass). The "because they're a women" is the problem and at the heart of what's being discussed, not the act of courtesy (or lack thereof). A lot of double standards are handwaved as not important because they encourage courtesy or somesuch bullshit. If you want to talk about internalized sexism in our culture, it's a lot deeper than just the types that are malicious. We won't move past sexism in our culture until we stop drawing arbitrary lines in the sand.
On a completely different note, my university put up some of those red cardboard cutouts of people to raise awareness about domestic abuse. To my surprise, I saw just as many cutouts of adult men as adult women. Most the men had statistics showing men being victims of domestic abuse as much as women written on them (while the women had generalized personal stories), but that's understandable. It brightened my day to see progress shown in these campaigns.