Okay, I see what Alatar is saying but in my opinion it misses the mark, because:
The issue isn’t assuming all men are monsters and all women are angels. That would be a ridiculous thing to assume. I think we can all agree on that.
The issue is believing women when they speak up about abuse, harassment, and assault. I don’t think it is a stretch to say that until very recently, men were usually the ones believed.
Why, Donald Trump, president of the United States, was throwing shade at women accusing Rob Porter just last week, despite the fact that there is photographic evidence of abuse! And remember the NFL, where it took a shocking video before they would do something about Ray Rice? Alatar may not be aware of that case, since the NFL isn’t a UK thing, but it is worth reading about. The men running the NFL just assumed their male player’s story was the truth and his fiancee’s was a lie. How about Brock Turner? A plea about how this poor young man’s life was impacted by being a sexual predator lead to a sweetheart slap on the wrist for him as the male judge dismissed the impact statement by the female victim.
Now, Mr Trump is a bit behind the times with his reaction, but that is how these things used to be treated: the person believed was the man, not the woman.
The judge whose heart moved when hearing the plea of a young student-athlete from his alma mater, but stayed still for a woman victim’s plea, is facing a recall effort. So there's that.
The men from the NFL had this excuse: it would cost some of them a lot of money if they acted against Ray Rice, and what is a woman’s words against cold hard cash? Fortunately enough people were appalled when the video leaked that they had to do something --- or they would have lost money.
So yeah, I’m sure that all comes a cross as a bit bitter and harsh. But dammit, being on the female side of this crap is bitter. Take the male reaction to this kind of stuff, the reaction to the prick of false accusation, the sense of unfairness ( “all women are innocent now?????” ) and multiply that by thousands, by real evidence, by lifetimes of frustration at being treated unequally, and see how far that gets you towards understanding a bit of the female rage around this topic.