Well... first... it wasn't meant as an insult. It is human nature for us to want to believe everyone is like ourselves. Salespeople exploit this by sometimes mimicking the gestures and posture of the person they are selling to. They only do it for a short time and just to get the person into the proper mindset. Although people's first reaction to sales people is caution, this human frailty of thinking people are similar can be a powerful tool in breaking down interpersonal barriers. Another trick is to remember something someone said that did not relate to business. A month later, repeat that thought back to them as if it were your own. Once a person feels a small connection, the rest comes automatically. They will assume similar moral and ethical positions, even religious and political positions.
After a person thinks this for awhile, with no evidence to the contrary, the assumed similarity fixes itself as fact in the mind. From that point onward, there is a solid foundation for that relationship.
This is a well studied fact of our psyche, something that we are all vulnerable to. The only difference seems to be the young and the old are most susceptible to this kind of manipulation, but we all have this fundamental assumption that other people are like us... even you. This, of course, is assuming you are "normal"... don't have a chemical imbalance and/or are psychotic or something. ;-)
You just choose to believe you don't assume people are like you.
It's the way you built the context of your question/statement. You asked a question, but immediately created an assumed condition... the "tech public" believes Android is an inferior, second class device. But your assumed condition is not born out of any data. It's born out of your opinion. The available data tells the opposite story. Looking through the posts, many of them are laundry lists of things bad about Android and good about iPhone, yet the market numbers don't support these assumptions at all.
I believe the group of you prefer iPhone, probably have many friends that prefer iPhone, therefore have a tendency to believe everyone is like you and your friends... thinking Android is inferior and a second class device. You've had no reason to think otherwise for so long that this assumption has fixed itself as fact in your minds.
That's why simple stuff like pointing out the iPhone is recognized by some people as being too small or too fragile or not flexible enough elicits posts of near outrage. Scoffing at the very ideas. This is not normal behavior. Normal behavior would be to provide a counterpoint and back it up with observations and data. Scoffing or proclaiming the argument isn't worth it are telltale signs the assumption is unsupportable... born out of an unreasonable and unsupported belief.
As for the reason you posted the question... Just look at the titles of the threads you started in this section alone... and your original posts within them.
Is Android too open in some aspects?
Google Looking to lose monumental case
Android Cheap iPhones?
They ask a question but only in the context of an assumption... mostly anti-Android/Google. This screams to me of someone wanting to draw like minded people to agree with them... to assure themselves they are correct in their beliefs... to be affirmed.
IMHO, you post these question/assumptions here because only here can you get affirmation. There would be no point in asking the questions or posing the assumption on an Apple forum. Of course everyone would agree with you. But by getting a few people from an Android forum to agree, you feel affirmed... and your unconscious desire to be like everyone else is satisfied.
Until I come along. ;-) Your 45 minutes is up. Next patient please!
But seriously, none of this should be taken as an insult. I'm sure if someone peered into my posts and/or life, they'd find similar things. We are all human. We all want to belong. IMHO, the younger you are, the more you want to deny this, but in the end we are all mostly the same. Evidence to this is all around you. It's really undeniable. Cars, clothes, houses, expressions, even the support-for / desire-to-own an iPhone.