This is a summary if you are curious about what the editorial above is about: [remember this is the article that got me thinking and is not about the Tampon vs Sanitary Pad idea that it induced]
I did some online searching and found out that there are plenty of resources that can easily explain the differences and the similarities. This includes:
Tampons vs. Pads: Which Suits You Better? at Cambiowoman.com: I was genuinely surprised that this bit of information is a lot more useful than the minuscule amount of data shared by highly-rated resources like WebMD. Not just the comparison bit, this resource also does a good job of busting myths about toxic shock syndrome that you will realize is mentioned in every Googled article about this comparison. Absolutely worthy of your 5-7 minutes. Now, I could not help but search online a bit further about the subject, assuming most men have a very basic idea about Tampons and would never try reading up about it unless their next job was at Tampax. The following resources are good:
Planet Puberty | Using Tampons: This could be a bit of an awakening for men who keep reading about and also acknowledge that God has been biologically unkind to women. This resource, intended for girls attaining puberty, could be an eye-opener that once the hormones kick in, women have a lot more to manage every day than we do.
Vox.com | Tampon Testing Stupidity: I did some digging and found that just like most consumer products today that come tainted with either the blood from animal farming or practices that impact our environment most hideously, Tampons have also evolved with a bit of menace and malice is across the big brands that are producing it, realizing that just like snacks without which we cannot survive, this is a product that will be bought even if the hard truth of Tampon Testing was ever brought to mainstream channels.
The National Geographic | Unwanted Tampon Commercialization: if you genuinely visit the above two links, you are most likely to visit this article by NGC, too, as it beautifully explains the invasive commercialization and the resultant unsustainability of the tampon industry. Another thing that caught my attention: FDA on Tampons, FDA about Tampons: the FDA really did not make much of an effort to share much. They could have done this resource page a lot better by giving more insight about such menstrual products and how every Tampon is not the same. Sadly, the FDA website is a disappointment for this subject...


