I disagree. I feel like people are far more respectful today. Whenever I'm called "hon" or "sweetie" in a condescending way, it's never a millennial or gen z guy doing it. When there is resistence to using pronouns, DEI, political cortectness, and things like racial slurs being tossed around under the guise of, "relax, it's just a joke" it's almost always coming from older folks. Today's men aren't more or less toxic or more or less masculine. They're just different--for better or worse--from our dad's generation. And that's okay
I didn't say it was solely sexism. I just said that the internet amplifies bad behaviors, by giving everyone a bullhorn and a certain degree of anonymity. I've been to websites where the community is tight-knit, and newcomers are warmly welcomed. Its fairly moderated without feeling stifling, and they're just a wonderful place to be. I've been to websites where the community does nothing but make people feel hurt, belittled, stupid, and angry and they're bickering constantly. Most website communities fall in between that. Furthermore, age doesn't automatically guarantee people will be prejudiced or sympathetic.
I think the kind of men that each of us knows or sees mostly (and then will judge as masculine or not) has at least a little bit to do with where we hang out and the kinds of people that we are most likely to observe or meet. Maybe that sounds redundant but I mean it as cause and effect. Forget people on TV and movies (and Internet), so many that are nowhere near reality in so many ways, they're actors and they live in bubbles, everything is fake or to look glamourous, even a lot of the news talking heads, politicians, the most visible ones, and so many of those personalities lean a lot toward behavior that they think is supposed to be the most trendy, as they avoid (or even demonize) people that they're supposed to think are 'undesirables' or just not worth thinking about. A little more on point, I seriously do not like those skinny pants that even many older men are wearing now.... though I see them on my TV screen a lot more often than I see them right in front of me (see above, TV versus reality). But one example is the football talk crew on Fox's Sunday NFL pregame show, not all of them wear traditional pants, just Michael and Terry and maybe a couple others, but the newer guy Gronk does wear those silly skinny pants. I don't think they are masculine at all. I don't even know what to think. That's just one 'symbol' that stands out to me., maybe a comparatively minor one but it's very representative I think. My 2 favorite older people (60s and 70s) are the most respectful towards women as anyone that I know, because that's how they were taught by their parents, and despite the fact that both of them carry the average levels of testosterone for active men, sportsmen, outdoorsmen, and one of them is a pure country boy who grew up working on a farm. And also several men about my own age and younger who are my friends.... men who wear jeans, men who sweat and sometimes get dirty or greasy doing various kinds of hard work.... men who wear uniforms and know that it doesn't make them different than they are but it does make them special, but they stay humble because they respect the responsibility that the uniform represents.... and as far as I know, everyone of those friends of mine is as respectful to others as anyone can expect them to be. So are today's men less masculine..... I think that it's far more possible than ever for men to be less masculine than ever. But there are still a lot of masculine men out there if we just know where to look.... and what to look for!!