A growing network of online communities known collectively as the “manosphere” is emerging as a serious threat to gender equality, as toxic digital spaces increasingly influence real-world attitudes, behaviours, and policies, the UN agency dedicated to ending gender discrimination has warned.
A commercial incentive?
If you want to commercialize solving the ills of society, you end up with death camps as being simply the end result of efficiency.
If you want to solve the problems of various demographics rather then viewing them as gender-specific instances in order to benefit the whole of society you get, among other benefits, a lot less genocide.
Incentives don’t always have to be of commercial value; they can also be moral and assumed.
You don’t usually receive commercial value for rescuing an animal, helping a child, or sheltering a woman. What I am saying is, why can’t we offer the same moral incentive to men? They are often portrayed as oppressors, and more value can be extracted from the “oppressor bogeyman” than from actually addressing and solving the problems.
What you are describing is not solving the problem; it is, at best, putting the problem under the rug, or at worst, getting rid of the problem altogether.