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    13 commenti

    1. Mammoth-Slide-3707 on

      Terrible what social media has done to these poor wee fuckers

    2. limaconnect77 on

      Certainly has nothing to with education and/or parenting.

      Being a woman, these days, walking home from work at night must be a troubling prospect.

    3. yellow-beard1 on

      Women’s rights are vitally important. Maybe it’s because that in UK schools girls & boys are both included equally and each have the same opportunities. Maybe that means boys won’t understand the realities of the adult world. Parenting & teaching seems the best way to turn this around.

    4. SkullDump on

      I’m sadly not surprised however we as a society need to tackle this and stamp it out. I’ve heard schoolboys on the bus before now chatting about Andrew Tate, like he’s “the man” and it’s disgusting that kids are being allowed to think these views are ok or acceptable.

    5. Historical_Owl_1635 on

      > to saying that certain sexist voices are part of the “new system” because what they say comes true

      Honestly this is one of the hardest parts that I’m genuinely baffled on how we tackle.

      Many moons ago when I was a desperate and helpless teenager I fell down the red pill rabbit hole, and although it’s taboo to admit the advice generally does work as getting you laid, which is the main thing teenage boys falling down these rabbit holes care about. As soon as you realise it works you tend to go further and further.

      This was pre-Tate and eventually I changed as it wasn’t who I wanted to be, and although I’m in a long term relationship now you definitely go through a hell of a lot more rejection when you’re being honest and respectful. All Tate has done is bring those same teachings to the mainstream.

      A part of me thinks the movement of shutting down all those forums (of which Reddit was one of the biggest) turned what was a niche rabbit hole into the problem we have today.

    6. GuaranteeAutomatic98 on

      I don’t believe that. Would like to see the primary source because I don’t think the survey would hold up to scrutiny. Surveying that age group is especially hard because they will put non serious answers, they will not understand terminology or implications of certain statements, they are volatile in terms of emotions and are more likely to answer very differently due to how their feeling that day and if schools and teachers made them do the survey that completely jeopardises the validity of the findings.

    7. BritanniaGlory on

      How many girls think “men’s rights” are unimportant?

    8. WiseBelt8935 on

      you can argue and i will that is in fact a good thing. what really is important is human rights not any identity based right structure

    9. JigMaJox on

      they should ask a sample of girls of the same age how they feel about the importance of men’s rights….

    10. HammerSpanner on

      it’d no concept of women’s or men’s rights when I was a kid of around 11-13/14

    11. IceyVanity on

      There are people who immigrated here from countries that don’t have women’s rights – what do you expect then.

      People don’t magically change their world or religious view just by living in a different country, they will express how they see things and some will see advantages to having that view.

      If boys see an advantage to have more rights over girls, they would probably see the appeal and gravitate to have such views.

      Power and control can be very alluring to a lot of boys and men, its why Andrew Tate became so popular with his rhetoric about how men and women should be.

      It will be hard to convince them out of it. Calling them misogynists won’t be enough to convince them to stop being so. If anything i see a trend especially online of people openly being proud of having such views these days.

      USA has been seeing a large resurgence of the idea of women being back in traditional house wife/ mother role whilst the man works etc. Some even promote it on tiktok as a better lifestyle called tradwife or something like that. Boys will see that and some will then expect girls to be like that.

      It is interesting to see how these things have suddenly started appearing a lot more.

    12. Electricbell20 on

      Today’s world is one of female empowerment much more so than previous generations. Girls are being told they can be anything. Meanwhile societal expectations of boys haven’t really changed.

      Boys could easily see girls as having more opportunities than they do, so the question about rights seems to be null void to them. The ideal man as being physically strong, provider and emotionally numb is still very common across the media landscape. What’s worse failures can’t be processed due to the last one

      Unfortunately there doesn’t seem to be much acceptance of the idea that men experience In the capitalist world that type disadvantage doesn’t have a big monetary impact.

      Also women push this as much as men before that one comes along.

      Men were never told they could be anything, it was anything but a long list. Unless we change it, I expect the trend will continue.

    13. StreamWave190 on

      About 20-30% of boys aged 11–15 are from Black and South Asian backgrounds, and surveys have shown these groups demonstrate consistently higher rates of misogynistic beliefs. It’s higher in some major cities like Manchester.

      >**Of the 1,214 people surveyed from ages 16 through 25, ethnic minorities were more likely to view him [Andrew Tate] positively versus white young people: 41 percent of Black respondents, 31 percent of Asian respondents, 15 percent of white respondents.**

      Sources: [https://www.isdglobal.org/isd-in-the-news/survey-one-in-five-young-people-in-the-uk-view-andrew-tate-in-a-positive-light/?utm_source=chatgpt.com](https://www.isdglobal.org/isd-in-the-news/survey-one-in-five-young-people-in-the-uk-view-andrew-tate-in-a-positive-light/?utm_source=chatgpt.com)

      [https://savanta.com/knowledge-centre/view/1-in-3-have-a-positive-view-of-andrew-tate/](https://savanta.com/knowledge-centre/view/1-in-3-have-a-positive-view-of-andrew-tate/)

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