UK Schools to give boys anti-misogyny lessons to stop toxic masculinity in wake of Netflix hit Adolescence

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Schools are set to give students anti-misogyny lessons in the wake of hit Netflix TV show Adolescence about a teen boy who murders a female classmate.

The classes form part of the government's new relationships, health and sex education (RHSE) guidance, which will be introduced before the end of the academic year.

It comes after Sir Keir Starmer revealed at Prime Minister's Questions on Wednesday that he was watching the mini-series with his two teenagers - and that he backs the show creators' calls for it to be shown in parliament and schools.

The four-episode programme follows the Miller family, whose lives are torn apart when their 13-year-old son Jamie is arrested for stabbing a female classmate to death after being influenced by online misogyny.

The drama, released ten days ago, was the most-watched show on Netflix worldwide last weekend, gripping audiences with its sobering portrayal of how social media and misogynistic influencers can impact young boys.

Though Labour's classroom guidance is still being developed, it is understood to include content to 'support healthy relationships', to 'enable schools to tackle harmful behaviour and ensure that misogyny is stamped out and not allowed to proliferate', an insider source said, the Times reported.

From as early as primary school, children will be encouraged to 'express and understand boundaries, handle disappointment and pay attention to the needs and preferences of oneself and others', with content modified for older children to reflect the 'real-life complexities of romantic and sexual relationships', the source added.

The development comes as a win for the Netflix show's co-writers, Jack Thorne and actor Stephen Graham - who stars as the teen boy's father - who have said they wanted Adolescence to be a programme that 'causes discussion and makes change'.

The new guidance will encourage students to 'think about what healthy sexual relationships involve' - including 'consent', along with 'kindness, attention and care'.

As children progress to secondary school, classroom content will start to include the 'communication and ethics' needed for healthy romantic and sexual relationships.

Topics covered will range from dynamics of power and vulnerability, to tools to manage 'difficult emotions', like disappointment and anger, that can affect relationships.

The effects of misogynistic online content and pornography on both young people's sexual behaviour and their views of relationship norms will also be discussed.

Education secretary Bridget Phillipson has faced pressure to overturn RSHE guidance drafted by the previous Conservative government - which included bans on sex education for children under nine and discussions of gender identity.

Adolescence was praised last week by the parents of a survivor of the Southport stabbings for drawing attention to the 'terrifying' impacts of online misogynistic content on young men.

Axel Rudakubana, then 17, stabbed their daughter - known as Child A - more than 30 times during his brutal attack on a Taylor Swift-themed dance class in July last year. He killed three young girls - and was jailed for life in January.

The parents, in a statement read out by their MP during a debate on knife crime in the House of Commons on Thursday, said influencers like Andrew Tate are having a 'terrifying' impact on teen boys, who needed to be protected from this content.

Rudakubana cleared most of his online search history before the murders - so it is not known whether he viewed any content associated with Tate.

Triple murderer Kyle Clifford - who shot his ex-girlfriend Louise Hunt and her sister Hannah with a crossbow and stabbed their mother Carol - is known to have viewed Tate's videos before making his ferocious attacks.

Teachers were told in government guidance released last year to look out for signs of misogyny and 'incel culture' in students aged 14 and over, which could lead to sexual abuse, violence and suicide.

The education secretary warned teachers to watch out for teen boys who had been indoctrinated by 'manosphere' influencers into 'hating women'.

Last week, former England football manager Sir Gareth Southgate blasted 'callous, manipulative and toxic influencers' for leading young men towards misogyny.

At the BBC's annual Richard Dimbleby lecture, he said the 'sole drive' of these pernicious online creators is their 'own gain': 'They willingly trick young men into believing that success is measured by money or dominance, that strength means never showing emotion, and that the world, including women, is against them.'

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Archive [March 23 2025]
 
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Reminder for any unaware that they portrayed the actual murderer, Alex Muganwa Rudakubana, an import from machete-happy Rwanda, as "Cardiff boy Jamie Miller".

With the lesson that British boys need to be endlessly lectured and made to feel guilty, for the Third World violence they never asked for.

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I am here to say this. It's completely retarded. The propaganda of leftists are just retarded. I mean there are not words
 
What the fuck is with libs and using fictional stories as causation for their bullshit? Handmaidens Tale is a great example. I hear all the time, "If we keep letting the republicans win things will turn into Gilead!" Bitch! That is not fucking real!!!!!!!!!! Please quote historical examples. Oh wait, there are none. Lol.
 
… a little psycho boy kills girl after she rejected him & bullied him online.
Boys needs anti toxic masculinity lessons.

How about the lesson from this rather dull show be that teenagers are wankers and shouldn’t be trusted to use the internet. How about it be that parents shouldn’t let teenagers isolate and use the internet all night. How about it be learning to spot bullying better.

The most interesting bit was seeing the cracks in the boys behaviour during the last episode. I wanted that to continue. Did t really give a fuck about his family, although yeah they’re suffering due to his shitty behaviour. With the van graffiti I honestly thought something else was going to be revealed, that choice of word seemed deliberate. Black bff girl could have been more too.

It did come across as a fairly accurate representation, although I wonder how many 13 year olds think they need to lose their virginity asap. Maybe it’s the area that makes the biggest difference? I really dunno. I did like the adults pure confusion at teenager lingo and use of emojis.

It ended quite abruptly. Just as things were starting to happen.
 
Imagine living in the UK. It's not like North Korea where 6 million border guards would fire at you for leaving. You can at any one time leave. No country, not even North Korea will be any worse. Yet they choose to live there. Not only they live there but they have kids and subject them to living in Britain as well.
A weirdly prevalent attitude in the UK, for a lot of people, is that the rest of the world is essentially the exact same or worse; and that we somehow have it good. I don't get it either. Countries fucked.
 
There's no way they'll be able to restrain themselves from making this bullshit not look like a punishment for merely being born a certain sex. This is going to backfire, they really should have questioned if the institutions are able to handle something like this (they should have questioned if something like this was even necessary, but they've been pretty hell-bent on pushing this misogyny angle, so that train has already left the station).
Nothing at school pissed me off more when I was young than arbitrary punishment based on sex - my reaction was naturally to do the contrary of whatever punishment. Are they TRYING to create an entire generation of fucked up young men to use as a scapegoat for all social ills?
 
What the fuck is with libs and using fictional stories as causation for their bullshit? Handmaidens Tale is a great example. I hear all the time, "If we keep letting the republicans win things will turn into Gilead!" Bitch! That is not fucking real!!!!!!!!!! Please quote historical examples. Oh wait, there are none. Lol.
I've said it before and I'll say it again and I'll keep saying it. There are a lot of people in the world who unironically cannot distinguish between fiction and reality. Like their brains just cannot comprehend the things they read or see on tv are not real. They really, truly and honestly believe the things they see are real. Even if they're consciously aware it's not real their subconscious brains treat it like it is and their decisions are influenced by that. It's really scary when you start to pay attention and notice just how many people's realities are defined by tv and movie logic.
 
If I were a secondary school boy right now I'd say I'm non-binary and say my gender identity is being invalidated by having to take these classes.
Reminder for any unaware that they portrayed the actual murderer, Alex Muganwa Rudakubana, an import from machete-happy Rwanda, as "Cardiff boy Jamie Miller".

With the lesson that British boys need to be endlessly lectured and made to feel guilty, for the Third World violence they never asked for.

View attachment 7126064 View attachment 7126062
This Netflix show isn't based on that incident. They've made up an entirely fictitious incident to try and push for this, which in some ways is even dumber.
 
@Otterly looks like your nudge speculation was true. They're immediately rolling out policies to capitalise on the discussion about this show.

Christ alive, but it worked as well. Nearly everyone I know was repeating ideas from it rote, or all-but-demanding everyone who hasn't seen it yet go watch it. Even the other rona jab refusenik in the family was all-on on praising this shit. I'm scared to look at it, in case there's some whacko nutjob-style hidden signal in it that will scramble my brain...
 
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