I understand your objection to that section. It was the part that I feel was a bit problematic, as well. It feels more global than general, if you understand the difference. The women's movement(s) have been much larger and much more public. Men's movements, men's groups? Not so much. In the US, there has been the Million Man's March which dealt with Civil Rights in the US (
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Million_Man_March) and the Promise Keepers, an Evangelical Christian group (
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Promise_Keepers). And then there's Robert Bly (
https://www.pbs.org/kued/nosafeplace/interv/bly.html) who, btw, is wrong about a lot in the interiew I just linked. But no, there is not any widespread movement of men which has any center on how women are treated by men and by society and how they should address violence against women which is mostly committed by men or violence against men, which again is mostly committed by men.
This may not be what you are doing but what I see quite often is people--mostly male people but not 100%--rejecting something out of hand because they object to one statement, one bit. In fact, I can think of someone who I actually love quite a bit who, in a discussion about day to day personal family/relationship stuff, not political stuff on a forum--will seek out and latch onto one thing that he (in this case, it's a he) wants to argue about instead of actually arguing/discussing the main topic. Because that's what's comfortable for him and the issue itself is not comfortable for him. To debate one minor statement--or part of a statement- instead of actually participating in a discussion where a difficult issue might be resolved or at least better understood. It's not productive and in this particular case, I find it not only frustrating irritating but downright cowardly. My observation is that most men I know have an excruciatingly difficult time saying that they are wrong about something or even saying I'm sorry. This is a relatively small sample comprised of men I know personally and not intended to apply to you or outside of men of my acquaintance.
Everyone likes to think of themselves as a good person. I do. I'm sure you do. I'm sure you are a good person and a good man.
My opinion is that our culture and our society is not doing enough to stop the thousands of ways that it treats women as though they are less than, as though they don't matter. I think the same about how our culture and our society treats children, persons of color and all that it considers 'other' and yes, men. But the topic of this article and this conversation between you and me and a few others is about how men treat women.
It might be useful for you to discuss specifically what your objection to that paragraph is.