Culture I am Gen Z. Men in my generation are not dating. Why should we?

Article/Archive

All across America, marriage, sexuality and relationships are on the steady decline among young people. According to a new Pew Research study, 63% percent of men aged 18 to 29 report being single. That means the number of single young men is nearly twice that of single young women, indicating a large breakdown in the social, romantic and sexual lives of American men. The big question is: Why?

One would think that making romantic connections would be easier than ever in our digital world, but the opposite is true. Our culture of convenience has paradoxically made dating more difficult for men as they are forced into a hyper-competitive, superficial environment that emphasizes instant gratification over true human connection. While there are several potential culprits causing this relationship breakdown, nothing has done more damage to the dating landscape than dating apps, social media and pornography.

Let’s start with dating apps. The advent of relationship websites started with Match.com in 1995 and evolved into the swipe-based platforms we know today with Tinder and Hinge releasing in 2012, and Bumble in 2014.

According to a survey of 6,034 adults, 53% of adults ages 18-29 have found someone to date through an app or site. However, new Census data shows that the U.S. marriage rate hit an all-time low in 2019. For every 1,000 unmarried adults, only 33 got married. This number was 35 a decade ago in 2010 and much higher at 86% in 1970. So, what gives?

It’s easier for men to date, thanks to technological conveniences, yet this technology has created a counterintuitive situation leading them to have a fickle attitude toward relationships, constantly searching for the next thing instead of committing to one person.

With the abundance of choices on dating apps, young men are finding it difficult to build deeper connections with a single person due to that sense of constant availability. When a minor red flag appears in a relationship that is otherwise going smoothly, why stick around and work it out when thousands of other choices are right at your fingertips? Young men are making that calculation every day on dating apps and are siding with the latter. How can you blame them with the constant programming coming from social media?

With social media today, men can scroll through their feeds and popular pages to view more beautiful women in one sitting than most men would see in their lifetime a hundred years ago.
Social media vies for people's attention leading women to commercialize themselves, which gives men an unrealistic expectation of the dating pool. On social media, people are encouraged to only show their best, even if it’s fake! With the advancements in facial-recognition technology, many times men are looking at women through heavily filtered and airbrushed lenses.

While women reap the benefit of the online attention, men are left wondering how the dating pool has gotten so far out of reach. Consequently, those same women who are marketing themselves as something they’re not are left without a partner and wondering where all the good men have gone. Through social media, both sexes are conditioned to treat themselves as a number instead of embracing true human connection and partnership.

Maybe I’m just old-fashioned, but to me, flirting face-to-face leaves a bigger impression on the potential for a relationship than reacting to girls’ Instagram Stories with the flame emoji. Coupled with the barrage of women on dating apps, the culture of constant comparison fostered by social media makes it hard for men to commit to a relationship and settle down. If that wasn’t enough, now even men’s greatest source of dating motivation has been co-opted by pornography.

There is no doubt that lust, which is carnal in nature, is the strongest driving motivation for men when it comes to dating. It sparks initial attraction and passion and draws people together. Ultimately though, lust may fade, but the emotional connection typically built upon that initial sense of attraction is what can determine a relationship’s success.

Pornography, however, completely destroys this dynamic, because it shifts men’s reward system to simply being carnal and physical in nature but lacking the emotional connection necessary for healthy relationships. Today, pornography is easier than ever to consume. Forty million U.S. adults regularly visit pornography websites, and 10% of U.S. adults admit to having an addiction to Internet pornography.
It’s easier for men to date thanks to technological conveniences, yet this technology has created a counterintuitive situation leading them to have a fickle attitude toward relationships, constantly searching for the next thing instead of committing to one person.
Research shows that about 67% of 13-year-old boys have seen at least one pornographic image on some sort of digital device in the past year, and by the age of 18, that number rises to 90%.

In porn, finding a "relationship" is effortless. With porn, this digital partner has nothing else to do but wait for you, please you and give you exactly what you think you want. If this partner ever fails to keep you entertained, they can be exchanged with a single click. Why waste your time dating, flirting and putting in effort when men can have their deepest sexual desires met online?

Today, men in their 20s are more likely than women to be romantically uninvolved, sexually dormant and friendless. Studies have shown that men are more likely to engage in risky and violent behaviors when they lack a stable relationship, leading to higher crime rates, substance abuse and social unrest. Single men may also be less invested in building strong social networks, leading to isolation and a lack of community engagement.

Simply put, the breakdown of relationships between men and women is startling, and it is detrimental to a healthy society. The good news is that men can fix this, and the remedy is easier than we think. Leave dating apps, stop watching porn, and go talk to girls in real life.
 
It’s easier for men to date, thanks to technological conveniences,
Clearly the writer relied on their imagination for research.

With the abundance of choices on dating apps, young men are finding it difficult to build deeper connections with a single person due to that sense of constant availability.
Yup. This comes from the writer's imagination.

Fox News has already DFEed the article, thanks for archiving their shame.
 
Maybe I’m just old-fashioned, but to me, flirting face-to-face leaves a bigger impression on the potential for a relationship than reacting to girls’ Instagram Stories with the flame emoji.
This is functionally illegal.
"Good men" would be met either hard at work or at worship.
"Sexual harassment" laws have turned flirting at work into a game of russian roulette with your career, and organized religion is nose-diving faster than flight 92 because of churches going woke.

At the top 20 I attended back in college, I remember overhearing all the girls on my vast dormitory floor lamenting the "boys" in my college for seeking serious, long-term relationships rarther than flings,, and everyone nodding in agreement at the de-facto boycott of the local guys for doing this.

This is the state of the dating pool quite some time ago, and mind you the "dregs" of this "dating pool" were considered "upper middle class", with a wide selection of wealthy brats of dignitaries and executives to choose from. No wonder there is a crisis in fertility and matrimony now.
 
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Serious relationships are for suckers, like the guy who wrote this article. Marriage only benefits women nowadays. For men, there's no point to it, and they're starting to figure that out. Also, men are biologically wired to sleep around and not commit to one person. The fact that women in general are getting worse doesn't help.
 
I was wondering when the propaganda to try and force a solution to the reproductive crisis would start coming in from the right-wing establishment media.
The good news is that men can fix this, and the remedy is easier than we think. Leave dating apps, stop watching porn, and go talk to girls in real life.
:story:

No, no amount of touch grass is going to somehow result in a crop of new taxpayers that will keep the various ponzi schemes the government partakes in going.

I'll admit that maybe, just maybe this is a guy who's naive and retarded enough to not realize what part he's playing, and that he genuinely is concerned about a real issue and thinks that this is the answer to the problem. But the guy clearly is seeing the very top layer of a region of societal dysfunction, to the extent that he thinks "wow people not dating/marrying at this rate in the recent generation is a problem!" without considering what the other downstream effects of that are, or even what the upstream causes are beyond basic-bitch conservative talking points on the topic. In this article, at least.
Fox News has already DFEed the article, thanks for archiving their shame.
To be fair if I wrote something this vapid and insipid I'd be embarrassed as well.
 
no amount of touch grass is going to somehow result in a crop of new taxpayers that will keep the various ponzi schemes the government partakes in going.
Especially because this brainwashed idiot seems to be ignoring that Women gatekeep what is "normal" in dating.
If dating is abnormal, it is because women have made it that way.

Show me a woman that's "ready to settle down" and I'll show you a shrew on the edge of infertility.
At the end of the day, the political benefits of social media in uncovering and fighting corruption are arguably not worth the social corruption of deluding every woman on the planet into thinking she's going to be the one to net "Chad Everitt Thundercock III" and his millions.
 
Clearly the writer relied on their imagination for research.
It becomes more apparent when you read the next paragraphs. The writer is assuming that men have the world in their fingertips because of dating apps and social media, when it is clearly the opposite. He states that there are so many choices for men that they would rather date (almost) all of them rather than stick to one commited relationship. While the "there are so many choices" line is true, he fails to realize that women are EXTREMELY picky on dating sites and are not going to instantly reply to a guy's first message unless they meet the ridiculously high criteria they set up for themselves, so guys are better off just bulk messaging a fuck-ton of women just to roll the dice and see what they can get.

Also the actual article is 404'd now, so i guess someone on FOX didn't like it, lol.
 
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