his isnt' a "masculinity crisis". Let's call it what it is: a deliberate campaign by the right to brainwash boys with misogynistic propaganda. Calling a woman teacher "a fucking slag" isn't masculine behaviour.
his isnt' a "masculinity crisis". Let's call it what it is: a deliberate campaign by the right to brainwash boys with misogynistic propaganda. Calling a woman teacher "a fucking slag" isn't masculine behaviour.
Young boys not being taught how to behave is more of a parenting crisis isn't it
its a mix of both,. The misogyny was already slowly developing 20-30 years ago as pard of "lad culture" *before* social media became that popular, nothing was done about it as it was considered "free speech/expression". Those lads are now the fathers of todays schoolboys.
@vfrmedia @vstab @benh Largely agree. Lad culture was already doing real damage before anyone had a smartphone. Loaded, Zoo, FHM normalised a particular kind of contempt for women throughout the 90s and 2000s, and it wasn't treated seriously because it came wrapped in irony. "Just banter" is a very old defence.
What social media did was remove the friction. That existing culture got a distribution network, algorithmic amplification, and a generation of influencers who monetised it. The fathers you're describing didn't create Andrew Tate, but they did create an audience that was already primed for him.
Andrew Tate isn't that old, he was still in high school and 6th form in the 2000s and would be the same age as of todays dads (men often start families later in life than they used to) - so he would have been created and enabled by the same men who popularised lad culture back in the day (which was a mix of older middle aged men and also young "gonzo" journalists)