For as many issues as men have, women have just as many, so I do not think it is a matter of one sex suffering more than the other, but rather how they go about ending the suffering.
I believe (from reading past statistics) more women attempt but more men succeed in the act because their methods are usually more fatal, like a gun shot wound.
Because we're men. We're expandable, if we don't serve a purpose we have no use. nobody cares
As an unattractive woman, I could tell you a thing or two about being expendable.
Because ugly males are systematically discriminated and oppressed by the totality of the human population (inclusing other males)
I won't disagree with you, but so are ugly females. It's just a bad hand all around.
Men are alone in this world. As a man you will never be loved/supported unconditionally unless you are good looking or have resources (which are both conditions imo). If you're ugly and you're a man, that's a death sentence imo. We are told not to show emotion, not cry, and to "man up" whenever we're going through something. Men are less likely to seek out counseling/support and if they do they're "too emotional" or a "pussy". For quite some time society has placed the burden of more responsibility and assertiveness on men. Those traits are seen as "masculine" and since masculinity has been so deeply associated with men it's expected that men live up to every single expectation society places on them while displaying that everything is ok on the outside (even if it's not). We cannot vent our frustrations to anyone about the way the system works or we're an "incel" or "misogynistic" or "hate women".
If an issue directly affects men nobody cares. They can virtue signal all day and post a bunch of "men's health" crap on their stories but it doesn't matter. Unless this outdated way of thinking changes, we can expect these issues to continue to cause serious problems in the future.
I care very much about the suffering for both men and women who are forced to deal with being far less than ideal, physically. If being an ugly man is a death sentence, then so is being an ugly woman, especially when a woman's worth is almost always wrapped up in her looks and how feminine she appears naturally, the rest is always secondary.
I feel the same for other conditions and a lack of vital privileges.
But I agree that the word "incel" gets thrown around way too liberally, sometimes I have trepidation of even bringing up the term "lookism" as I feel it has been tainted by more radical and hateful groups, when it really so desperately needs to be taken seriously and discussed with compassion.