A big fat NO. Most women wont admit they want their cake and to eat it too. For them its an ego boost to have a group of male friends. Im just being honest. But I ask you ladies, do you want a group of guy friends or do you want a guy to partner with?
I guess it really depends on the individual people and their own personalities or situations.
Because of my own experiences in life (heartbreak,) I'm not so interested in having "a guy to partner with" as much anymore. Maybe something or somebody will change my mind eventually, but I've already had the experience of being cheated on and left behind, as many have, and you know what they say. Once bitten... and maybe for me, always shy. For some, it might drive them to look for a partner all the more. I was like that for a while, but not so much after 20 years.
So the concept of friends is actually very appealing to me because it's how I've survived for a couple of decades now. I should also mention that my life would probably be considered unusual by most. I forget that when I'm writing about my guy friends, most people don't realize that they are online (but I've met them in person) and/or long distance.
I agree that men and women spending time together alone for extended amounts of time or on a very regular basis can be bad news.
In my case, all my guy friends are hours away or across the country, so spending time in person only happens once every several years, either for just part of a day or in a group setting. If anyone in the group is seeing someone, the person is always welcomed to bring their significant other along. I do not have any guy friends that I see in person on a regular basis.
One thing I learned very quickly about single life is how much I don't know, so this is why I like having different friends with different experience in different areas, whether guys or girls. One thing about "partnering with someone" is that I found it can be very isolating if you're only relying on each other to try to figure out everything. But this was just my own experience, and for others, it might be different.
Within my group of guy friends, one is good at tech, one is good with finances and cars, and one has his own HVAC business, so whenever I have questions or problems in these areas, there is someone reliable to ask, even though they are far away and I have to send dozens of pictures trying to explain the problem. And even if they don't know the answer, they can steer me in the direction of someone who might.
I've come to see life as "safety in numbers," which has meant building a tribe of both men and women with a variety of skills.
I do realize that any opposite-gender situation, even just text or long-distance could become a temptation for people, but as of now, my faraway friends have been keeping me afloat for 10 years (the last time I lived near any of my friends in person) and then some.
It's not that I'm opposed to making new friends or that I don't think I can -- it's just how life has worked out for right now, and the people I do meet usually turn out to be acquaintances and not friends, even at church.
I don't know if it will ever change, and oddly enough, when I do make new friends it tends to be online. But either way, I'm content and very thankful for the little group I do have, no matter how far away they might be.