I feel like I've got a good reputation on this issue, I haven't jumped out the window or shat on most/many black women and tend to always throw out disclaimers: internet shyt is internet shyt, it doesn't really apply to real life. And I stand by all that. But like you said, this shyt is blatant. And outside of the internet it tends to show up in places that have impact: like academia and the media. So if we have black academics who are largely intersectional black feminists - who believe black men are oppressors and the black women are the marginalized group within the race that needs the most attention/help - how does that influence education policy? How does that influence how an intersectional black feminist teacher approaches black boys in her classroom? How does this impact the "influencers" who (white) corporations bring in to help them create programs like Wells Fargo's resources for black women small business owners? How does this influence how liberal politicians speak to black people - and who they approach first?
And that's where we get to the current situation, Steve Bannon, Trump, and all this other shyt. It's hard to tell a group of people they need to fall back, "we got this," ignore the fact that we're marginalized too, etc...and then say "don't forget you better vote the right way on Tuesday." That's just not a sustainable position....and I think the people who are instituting this stuff know it.