Alaric on 2010s feminism and sexual norms. He sees it as a concrete, sharp break in 2014 alien to anything that came before. which almost overnight made anti-male sentiment the most pervasive cultural force in the Western world.
2014 saw a huge top-down feminist media campaign both motivating and caused by government initiatives and international institutions. This was the true start of Woke as a feminist and internationalist movement, before it became more racialist and parochial.
2014 redefined consent and made rape and street harassment, low and falling for decades in the American mainstream, centerpieces of American social consciousness.
The feminist revolution quickly became very silly (remember manspreading, mansplaining, phallocentrism?).
The gender war permanently warped many young adults' ability to interact with the opposite sex (COVID lockdowns hitting in the transition to adulthood made this even worse).
Discourse on the deaths of marriage and dating norms ignores that these were not abandoned but are actively being killed.
Men have become framed as rapists-by-default; this message is implanted in schools, universities, and workplaces, with the result that men's motives in all interactions with women are considered suspect. To avoid this, many men infantilize and feminize themselves.
Gender war myths dominate media - types of men (frat bros, musicians, nerds) are defined in terms of expected sexual crimes, and a white knight narrative (sexually aggressive [white] man, innocent girl, outside actor protects girl) became a standard [extremely contrived] trope.
This fictional white knight narrative killed the sexually-loose hookup culture of 2000s college campuses and was completely new, not an organic evolution of pre-2014 American media.
If the post-2014 gender war rendered male sexuality borderline criminal, it did the opposite for female, providing unconditional support for female sexual expression, even prostitution. Sexual desirability became men's chief virtue.
The one bit of female sexuality not celebrated is sincere attraction and love for men; genuine, mutual love between a heterosexual couple went from commonplace to rare in media [cf, Frozen, Modern Family.
Trying to appeal to men has become taboo for young women, hence the bizarre sexual aposematism of zoomer women.
I don't think the 2014 revolution was as unprecedented as Alaric believes; here's Scott Aaronson talking about how he wished he'd been born a woman and tried to castrate himself (in the 90s) out of horror that a woman might realize he found them attractive.
In 2015, Twitter was "the free speech wing of the free speech party" according to CEO Jack Dorsey, even avoiding collaboration with the NSA (unlike Google, Facebook). By 2019 it was one of the most censored, monitored, and controlled social media networks in the world.
YouTube was the biggest and most monetizable platform, Reddit the most important discussion forum, Amazon needed for authors and websites, and Google Search the only way to surface niche info sources. Twitter mattered as the social network of the intelligentsia.
In 2015, Twitter under Twitter general counsel Vijaya Gadde began reinterpreting their existing rules much more broadly and banned hate speech, to "keep Twitter safe." Chuck Johnson was banned for tweeting that would "take out" (attack digitally, not murder) a BLM activist.
Another thread on the closure of the Internet. Amazon, like other major tech giants, had little content policy beyond "no illegal content, spam or scams/fraud" in 2015 and by 2020 had a well developed censorship infrastructure for both the web store and AWS.
Amazon is particularly important for two reasons: (1) AWS making it, like Google Search, a major Internet chokepoint and (2) 50% book and 80% e-book market share; Amazon banning a book is the closest a non-classified book can really come to being banned in the US.
The first cracks in Amazon's neutrality appeared in June 2015, when a media blitz and political pressure campaign (sparked by Dylan Roof) led to Amazon removing all Confederate flag (a completely normal American symbol) merchandise from the site.
WIRED: Silicon Valley gay networks are so influential because gays are "cross-generational" allowing settings where "established wealth meets emerging talent."
Gays run Silicon Valley, lesbians and fat people hardest hit.
There is a common Hollywood upwards mobility narrative for early 20th century European immigrants. It's not really true; for most origins earnings for both first and second generation were similar and were already above average in generation 1.
Relative rank order didn't change much either.
I know you might be wondering "why are Italians so high and Norwegians, Swedes, etc so low." Answer: farms.
More on the 2016-2019 closure of the Internet. In 2015, Reddit, like YouTube, had almost no content policy beyond banning illegal activity, doxxing, harassment, and involuntary or underage pornography. By 2020, Reddit had purged political dissent from the site.
Much of Reddit's shift was motivated by one thing: that r/The_Donald, the hub of internet Trump support, could consistently reach and dominate the front page. Reddit repeatedly changed their algorithm and policies specifically to suppress r/The_Donald before banning it.
The first major crack in Reddit's freedom of speech stance was in 2016, when the CEO of Reddit, Steve Huffman, was caught personally editing user's posts on r/The_Donald. He then changed Reddit's policy to exclude r/The_Donald from the r/popular Reddit homepage.
The most important platform to be closed off 2017-2019 was YouTube. Before 2017, YouTube was a very open platform, with easy monetization and almost no moderation of legal content. By the end of 2019, thoughtcrime (anything to the right of Ben Shapiro) was thoroughly purged.
In March 2017, several news organizations (The Times of London, the Guardian, WSJ) published coordinated articles about ads appearing next to "problematic" content on YouTube. This led to the British government summoning Google to explain and an advertiser boycott.
[as an aside, no one sane believes that an ad appearing next to a YouTube video implies the company behind that ad endorses or knows about the content of the video; this was 100% astroturf. No one knew or complained until the news articles hit]