Young, Male and Anti-Feminist – The Gen Z Boys Who Hate Women.
Substantial proportions of young men have anti-feminist beliefs. and there’s a young male backlash. This piece describes this as increasing (but is there longitudinal data?). vice.com/en/article/dyv… @vice 1/4
Some young men participate in women-hating online forums and gaming communities, and there’s a seeming increase in boys’ and young men’s adherence to and promotion of anti-feminist claims, at least online. 2/4
In her book ‘Men Who Hate Women’, Laura Bates writes of boys of 11 and 12 entering anti-feminist communities, recruited by older men through gaming. Such involvements also can inspire other forms of prejudice, e.g. racism. 3/4
Meanwhile, organisations such as Exit UK work to deradicalise individuals.
Folks, I’m asking: what other strategies and initiatives are out there to prevent and reduce young men’s recruitment into anti-feminist, misogynist movements?
vice.com/en/article/dyv… via @vice 4/4

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More from @MichaelGLFlood

Jan 12
Men who perpetrate domestic and sexual violence are *made*, not born. Their use of violence is the unsurprising outcome of widespread social conditions. They use violence not because of some hardwired disposition but because of the gendered norms and inequalities around them. 1/4
The violence that some men use is the predictable result of the lessons about manhood they absorb as they grow up, the sexist peer cultures in which they participate, and the gender inequalities & other conditions that are woven into their everyday lives. 2/4
So if we want to stop making perpetrators, we have to change the social conditions which produce them. That is what primary prevention is: changing the cultural, and material, and structural conditions which drive violence. To prevent initial perpetration & victimisation. 3/4
Read 4 tweets
Jan 3
Feminism: is a movement aimed at ending patriarchal power structures and social norms, not a mere celebration of ‘choice’. By Dr Meagan Tyler. 1/6
theconversation.com/no-feminism-is…
Women make choices, yes, but these are shaped by wider social conditions. Choices are hollow when structural conditions and cultural norms are highly limiting.
A choice-focused pseudo-feminism doesn’t demand real social change, and it undermines calls for collective action. 2/6
“Instead of resistance, we now have activities that were once held up as archetypes of women’s subordinate status being presented as liberating personal choices.” 3/6
Read 6 tweets
Jan 2
Regret, distress, low self-esteem: Why today’s hook-up culture is a terrible deal for women
By Louise Perry. 1/5
newstatesman.com/politics/2021/… @Louise_m_perry
Louise Perry note that, on average, men desire casual sex more than women do, and hook-up culture is one solution. Women are encouraged to close the gap by imitating male sexuality, having sex “like a man”. Some women like this, but for many it’s unpleasant, even distressing. 2/5
Studies find that following hook-ups, women are more likely than men to experience regret, low self-esteem and mental distress. Nevertheless, a youthful period of hooking up is now the norm. 3/5
Read 5 tweets
Dec 29, 2021
The problem with how men perceive rape
splinternews.com/the-problem-wi…
By Lux Alptraum, 2016 @LuxAlptraum 1/11
The problematic idea “that sex can be divided into two broad categories: capital R Rape (which is monstrous, criminal and should be severely punished by the legal system) and normal, chill sex, which is obviously consensual and with which no woman should ever have a problem" 2/11
"But missing from this dichotomy are the scores of “not rape” violations, and acts that might best be described as “sexual microaggressions”—small acts of boundary-pushing and coercion that might be easy enough to brush off in isolation, but in aggregate teach women that..." 3/11
Read 11 tweets
Dec 26, 2021
The female price of male pleasure
By Lili Loofbourow, 2018.
Why may women not recognise and resist sexual situations in which they feel uncomfortable? Because they have a lifetime’s training in ignoring that discomfort.
theweek.com/articles/74997… 1/11
“Women are enculturated to be uncomfortable most of the time. And to ignore their discomfort.”
When men talk about “bad sex”, it’s often about sex that is passive or boring. When most women talk about "bad sex," they tend to mean coercion, emotional discomfort, or even pain. 2/11
“we live in a culture that sees female pain as normal and male pleasure as a right.”
Women are constantly and specifically trained out of noticing or responding to their bodily discomfort, particularly if they want to be sexually "viable".
3/11
Read 11 tweets
Dec 23, 2021
Unacknowledged rape: the sexual assault survivors who hide their trauma – even from themselves
theguardian.com/society/2021/a… 1/6
Large numbers of women have had experiences that meet legal definitions of rape and sexual assault but don’t label it as such. It can take years for survivors to realise or accept that their experience amounts to sexual assault or rape, if ever. 2/6
A 2016 analysis of 28 studies of nearly 6,000 women and girls aged 14+ who had experienced sexual violence found that 60% of survivors didn’t label their experience as “rape”. Instead, they used descriptors such as “bad sex” or “miscommunication”. journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/15… 3/6
Read 6 tweets

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