Usually, people don't get divorced without a reason; there is always a reason, and at least one will look offended. So if a woman has the opportunity to take everything for herself, then I'm with her; let the man start all over again.
Merely reading these sentences, I can immediately see someone supporting her fellow female with ultimate bias, you think the man starting all over again is the best option? What if the woman was the infidel one and had more finances, would you prefer that the man takes everything, and the woman starts all over again? or do you think men are the only causes of divorce? Your statement reiterates women as gold diggers who use marriage as their gold mine, and it is not a very good image.
There is no need to look for justice where there is none; marriages do not fall apart just like that. If you do not have a marriage contract, then there is nothing to think about.
Marriage contracts are the best, it surely saves men from women that thinks like you in the event of separation and ensures they the men are not victimized
I understand the indignation of men now, but there is a good expression: women do not leave real men, and if he leaves, then the ex-wife has every right to take everything as compensation for moral damage and time wasted on this idiot.

The expression should be two sided, Men too hardly leave Good, submissive and supportive wives, my mum was one and my father never even thought of it. FYI I had a cousin who marries an Australian and the wife went to the extent of bringing a youngie to their matrimonial bed and when caught, she filed for divorce. In this case is she not the idiot and does she even have the right to claim a dime upon divorce as against the fortune she claimed?
My punchline is this, nobody is entirely innocent in any divorce proceeding, every party must have contributed in one way or the other and direct victimization of men is not a balanced approach to divorce. If a man feels safe and secured in his marriage, he would not be compelled to hide his finances. We can take a lesson from the player Achraf Hakimi who said that he sought out ways to protect his finance after his wife's comment one morning during an argument which she threatened him with divorce and its implications.