I don't think that thing about "the true reason male college enrollment is dropping" is true, but even if it were true, I don't think it would be a good point, either. Like assuming it's true; okay so the USA are now a society discouraging young men from getting college-educated. The only logical conclusion here is that programs must be created to encourage young men to get college education and ensure they do not feel unwelcome there. Whether this means actually changing anything going on at college or dispelling misconceptions is a different question, but just going "well, they're choosing not to. Their own fault, really" is not very different from the pre-affirmative action mindset of "well, women are choosing to be home makers. What do you want us to do, *force* them into college?" conservatives had. Slightly different, perhaps, but not sufficiently so to say "lmao not my problem" as the post implies.
I don't think the post implies that, does it? It's specifically bemoaning that nobody is talking about this big problem.
And it's not about men feeling "unwelcome", it's about a society wide devaluing that comes with the feminisation. A high prestige job becoming attractive to women and consequently becoming a low prestige job is a well observed pattern. And it happening to higher education is a bad sign at a time when higher education is more important than ever.















