I read a truly awful book the other day. JJ Bola’s (apologies if you’re a reader of PB) Mask Off: Masculinity Redefined can be perfectly summed up by a translation of its German title: Don’t be a man: Why masculinity is a nightmare for boys. The idea that the solution to toxic masculinity is to implore boys not to be men is, to put it mildly, self-defeating.
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Does that make her an incel?
Seems to me many “models for masculinity” seem to be an effort to try and turn men into women. “Wouldn’t it be easier if men were more like women”. I’m not other people’s keepers and I’m not going to call out someone else for whatever is -phobia of the week. I don’t want to cry more often, I don’t want to “let it all out” or share with friends.
I feel like too many of these people have a mindset/message get rich quick (in dubious ways) and then be lazy, sitting around in sports cars and being misogynistic.
Let's have a masculinity that emphasises being able to do things! In some ways I worry that the modern world has us all to specialised... experts in a narrow range of tasks and then hire someone for anything else.
The challenge is money. So many of the young men now protesting against this “losing” vs women point out that they personally have little or no power. That is class and money, not gender.
After two recent hurricanes you’d think this might not look good but the media just continue to normalize his disgusting behaviour.
And his comments earlier in the week about choosing the black or white President resulted in tumbleweed .
It would just be quite nice if they didn't feel the need to riot and/or vote for a narcissist that is offering them an opportunity to turn back the clock on the subjugation of women.
This budget is going to be critical.
https://x.com/luketryl/status/1845359998009819343?s=61
We need to find a way to get back to a more complementary approach and a more community based society because setting everyone up as in a fee for all race is something only a few can win and most will lose even if they don’t recognise that they are losing.
White working class boys do the worst in school of any demographic.
"but if a woman calls out something you do or say as sexist or misogynist, don’t get defensive, take them seriously, thank them and reflect genuinely on whether you need to adapt your behaviour."
There's a few posters on here - an all male forum (why is that?) - who could do with listening to this advice.
While the header article has some good ideas, the best way to limit so called toxic masculinity is to find them good jobs and stable relationships
Have you seen this article?
https://www.ft.com/content/17606f25-1d03-4f37-b7f4-f39989af9bde
It's a world wide phenomenon that young women are now better educated than men, and the earnings gap has closed or inverted as a result. This does tend to revert to the usual gender gap once over 30 for a variety of reasons, or at least still does.
The average man is no longer likely to be the breadwinner to a family in the way that might have been the case a few decades past. If men want "Trad Wives" they need to be in a position be Trad Husbands, and few are. Either they need to adapt to changing social structures or are going to remain single.
I know that grammar school advocates say that selection offers a route out - but only for the selected few. We need to invest in early years education, nursery, primary. Make the coming generation better educated generally. Only then do we break the cycle.
Our problem is that as a nation we have become hopelessly lost. Instead of seeing things like education as an investment, it is portrayed as a cost. A burden. Who will pay?
If there’s a problem with too much competition in the labour market, that’s because of companies increasingly treating their employees as interchangeable and disposable units. Better protection for labour is the answer there.
https://www.nationalgrideso.com/document/304496/download
Key curious thing.
The conventional (AC pylons) solution is cheaper if we do it to a 2030 deadline, rather than holding it back to 2034. Which is what makes the underground setup look competitive, and is pretty much the opposite of the Telegraph spin.
(There are other limits on the DC underground setup- harder to upgrade, supply challenges and the AC/DC converters being not nice things to be by.)
I'm going with "cherry-picking statistics like a drunk bloke using a lamppost".
My eldest child has just started primary school. He was at a forest school previously, and seemed utterly in his element climbing trees and covering himself in mud (as did everyone there of whatever gender). Since starting school he has found the sedentary days quite difficult and (anecdotally) this has been a harder transition than it is for most girls in his class.
I wonder if there is something structural in primary education that turns off most boys more than it turns off most girls and initiates this attainment gap? No doubt the gender of most primary teachers is a bit of a factor, but perhaps also the design of the school day.
I'm not intending to create an exclusive definition but an inclusive one - to answer your point directly I think we should be tolerant of the full gamut of personalities other than those who seek their own validation by harming others.
In one of my videos (back in the days I did videos!), I did an analysis of Ford's River Rouge plant, and how it produced as many cars as it ever did; only it required one tenth the workforce, and most of the people employed now had engineering degrees.
The skilled working class job has been destroyed by technology, and that genie is not going back in the box. But we do need to find a way to deal with the consequences.
I think Trump is treated extremely generously by US media.
I mean, how do you think the media should treat someone who organized fake slates of electors to overthrow a democratic election. That's a criminal, right?
And not just a tax dodger or someone guilty of sexual assault. Someone who attempted to subvert the very fabric of democracy.
Yet they treat him as if he was a normal candidate.
Mr. Stereodog, another fun factor (although not one that particularly affects one sex more than the other) is AI eating jobs in various sectors.
*sighs*
That’s what the trad husbands around here do. Head out in their battered old Renaults on a Sunday wearing orange hi vis, rifles over the shoulder and dogs at heel, bag a few boar or deer, then head back to the salle des fetes where the trad wives, specs on and dyed hair cropped to a couple of inches, are preparing the salads and gratin dauphinoise.
When in reality, he is a political grotesque.
One thing that puzzles me is that your positive model for masculinity is not, in my opinion, any different from the default 'approved' model that applies across today's society. It is definitely a long way away from the model of masculinity that was prevalent when I was growing up as boy back in the 1960s - none of your three sub-bullets would have been widely accepted then.
So yes, your model is great, but not radical. I think it's the rebellion against the kind of model you are propounding that drives the popularity of Trump, Tate, etc. amongst disaffected males. I've not read Bola's book but that sounds like the outlier to me - which is probably why he can get it published.
Notwithstanding the above, your header was really thought-provoking. Thanks.
You don't realise how deep seated it is unless you have female colleagues who trust you enough to open up and describe their experiences.
It's very hard to vote for a candidate who appears to dislike you. And many on the left and in the centre appear by their language to dislike men.
But somehow he gets away with it all. That's what Great Men do, which is why one should be wary of Great Men, in case they aren't Good Men.
We've de-industrialised most at the heavy industry level, which is worst possible outcome for these traditional male jobs.
I recently read a fascinating book "Billy No-mates" looking at male friendships and how they work. It is an easy read, being by a comedian not a sociologist.
Billy No-Mates: How I Realised Men Have a Friendship Problem https://amzn.eu/d/fa1pUwL
In it he looks at how men and women socialise, and the different styles of doing so. Obviously there is considerable overlap, but basically girls socialise around relationships (hence why Social Media bullying is more hurtful to girls) while boys do around sport, or tasks (hence why gaming addiction is so hurtful to boys)
Baden Powell was a strange fellow, but essentially right about this a century ago. Get boys off street corners and doing things together, whether team sports, outdoor pursuits or construction tasks.
I blame that Starmer.
I need to get out more .....
It's interesting that contrary to much that is said on PB, being non-college educated is not good for career prospects. We are increasingly a knowledge based service economy.
I think that Tate and similar "alpha males" are selling a lie to their young followers, quite apart from the crassnees of their life style. Self evidently there can be few such "alpha males" and most will fail if they try, thereby feeling double failures, and for many the only route to such a lifestyle is dealing drugs or crypto-scams, neither likely to be a sound foundation in life.
I struggled to formulate that positive model in a way that kept to 600 words or so (I rarely read headers longer than that so try to keep mine short). As I sent it to TSE I had a nagging feeling it was lacking something - you've clarified for me what I think it lacks.
To expand a bit more, my issue with JJ Bola's book is that it seemed to want to deny
masculinity rather than offer a model that the
majority of boys growing up could identify with. I
think in some senses society as a whole does this
to many boys at the moment - boys can't see a space for their expression of masculinity (and so are vulnerable to Trump, Tate etc).
In part as a result of insightful comments here, if I was to rewrite it I'd focus more on the structures of society (eg primary school) and how they can bettercreate space for different healthy expressions of masculinity.
It's what I love about PB - I've learnt lots this morning.
But just watch any documentary from the 60s to see how grey and miserable life was for most.
I agree we should give kids much more freedom though - I can't quite work out why we stopped that. The world is not any more dangerous now than it was then.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tz257tCN708 from 3m 20 in
A cynical person might just think that the Republicans are flooding the state with dodgy polls that pump up the Republicans by nefarious means, in order to allow Trump to wail on November 6th that he was robbed. Again.
I suspect there will many tears shed by the Beyond Thunderdome generations.
The only answer the Liberal establishment has to this is to increase lessons on misogyny and sexism, which is precisely the wrong way to go about it; it's like trying to put a fire out by throwing more matchboxes on it, and shines a light on their limited intelligence.
Until both sides can start to have positive and inspiring conversations about what is possible for everyone, stopping the "othering" of groups, and respecting each person as an individual with limitless potential in a shared society, the polarisation will continue and get nastier.
It's wider than Primary though. The whole education system needs tearing down and rebuilding from first principles.
In a way that I couldn't necessarily have articulated when I wrote the piece I agree that focusing on identity obscures the real issues, and can see that it can exclude even when I'm not meaning it too.
Remember, these f****** are seriously tooled up.
There's a certain type of radical feminist or Lib who thinks the answer to women being second-class citizens in society in the past is that it's now the turn of men to have a go.
You should apologise to JJ Bola for mentioning him at all. Kudos for getting through his book.
Many women find the expectation to have a full career, look like a model, have a perfect family and a perfect home exhausting and unsatisfying.
Especially when the reality of not being able to do 10 things at once intrudes.
Not so sure about the perverts thing, though that's often cited. Jimmy Saville didn't need the internet.
And, although the trends were there years before, Covid did a lot of harm, with which we have by no means yet fully come to terms.