In the article Is Government Complicit in Death of Boys & Men? Sean Kullman the president of the Global Initiative for Boys and Men made very good remark:

While Gender policy councils (focused solely on women and girls) and councils on women and girls at state and federal levels continue to receive public and private support, little has been done for boys and men. My Brother’s Keeper and race-based programs have attempted to address issues for boys of color while simultaneously ignoring other boys. This approach has not been the practice by councils focused on women and girls, which takes a more inclusive approach to address the needs of girls and women of all races. Policy councils on boys and men tend to separate males by race instead of promoting inclusive programs that unite boys and men of all races to work together toward targeted and common goals. Although we can rightly argue boys of color face serious challenges, data reveals all boys of all races do worse than their female counterparts of the same race in California schools and nationally. Much of the policy action has happened around race, while full, male inclusion in equality and equity policies continue to go largely ignored.

The same problems facing black men affect white men too, black men are less likely to go to college and less likely to graduate than black women and the same thing for white men compared to white women, black men are more likely to be homeless than black women and the same thing for white men compared to white women, black men live shorter than black women and the same thing for white men compared to white women etc etc ...

Why men's rights issues are treated as if they are racial issues that affect black men only when in reality men of all races are affected ? the answer is easy. to protect feminism and the "gender victim status" exclusively for women.

They always bring race, sexuality and class to deny the existence of men's rights issues.