"Well, let me say it this way. I am regularly taking time of from
Wikipedia because of petty content disputes. Like whether 9000 out of
21000 news articles mentioning that the organization is conservative is
sufficient to add it to the lead of the article, and whether that
absolutely should be balanced with the only 2 mentions out of 17,000
news articles that can be found mentioning that the other organization
is liberal. This kind of petty POV pushing is so childish. And sorry,
but this is something man do far more often than women and I have seen
sufficient woman just leave after two or three rounds of rule bending
stubbornness."

So, petty, childish POV-pushing is something men do more than women. Is there any actual statistical evidence of this? Aren't we here precisely because the number of women on Wikipedia is statistically tiny? I'm sure you do encounter women doing it on WP more than men. That might be something to do with the fact that there are far more men here than women. Is there any way we could try to think of a solution which doesn't involve gender stereotypes - or at least, if we're going to involve stereotypes, provide evidence stronger than "well, it's happened to me"?