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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Ever wondered how a Genestealer Cult infestation would play out IRL? Bongistan is a great example of it. The leaders completely hate their own people and favor the invaders.

And there's only one conclusion with a Genestealer Cult. Devoured by the very invaders they prayed for. Still, in relation to rampant propaganda being shoved into kids brains, its absolutely atrocious. This is just going to create even more resentment towards the system. Not less.
 
I gave up on Netflix and Britain years ago.

Now I'm going to sit here on my front porch with my AR-15 drinking a Budweiser next to my pickup truck with the Confederate bumper sticker on it, smiling to myself about how I live in the land of freedom, and you limey bastards don't.
 
Ever wondered how a Genestealer Cult infestation would play out IRL? Bongistan is a great example of it. The leaders completely hate their own people and favor the invaders.

And there's only one conclusion with a Genestealer Cult. Devoured by the very invaders they prayed for. Still, in relation to rampant propaganda being shoved into kids brains, its absolutely atrocious. This is just going to create even more resentment towards the system. Not less.
as autistic as this is, it's somehow painfully accurate
 
I gave up on Netflix and Britain years ago.

Now I'm going to sit here on my front porch with my AR-15 drinking a Budweiser next to my pickup truck with the Confederate bumper sticker on it, smiling to myself about how I live in the land of freedom, and you limey bastards don't.
I'm an American and I go to Bongland regularly for personal reasons.

It's a weird place and they barely speak English.

Also it's so fucking gay but there are no good flights between bwi and Manchester.
 
I'm an American and I go to Bongland regularly for personal reasons.

It's a weird place and they barely speak English.

Also it's so fucking gay but there are no good flights between bwi and Manchester.
They barely speak English in America. That's nothing new.

 
The end result of this show is making preteen and young teen girls terrified of the sweet looking boys in their class.
There've already been tons of studies showing DEI training and bullshit like this backfires. They're going to turn some of these boys into Elliot Rogers.
Are they TRYING to create an entire generation of fucked up young men to use as a scapegoat for all social ills?
... by intensifying all of the social messaging that made the line Tate is selling look attractive in the first place. What could possibly go wrong?
A system is what it produces or some such thing. This is all by design. These people know exactly what they are doing.

The issue isn't how we convince kids who watch Andrew Tate that he's wrong, the issue is why are they turning to Andrew Tate in the first place? Failing to address that and hectoring them is only going to make them more into the manosphere
The "why" kids are turning to Tate is because Tate/the manosphere are natural responses to the anti-male system. The system is incapable of addressing the issue because they are the issue. And recognizing that requires dismantling many of the many prevailing ideological truths held sacred by the two tier queers of the world. Its a catch-22 for them, either dismantle the system, and stop being feminist. Or continue to be feminist, and alienate more and more men and boys. Its clear they prefer alienation, and suppression of wrong thinkers. Which inevitably leads to domination at the hands of Islam.

"Femicide" is another wild one. Murder is le extra bad when it happens to a whaman or some such insane retard shit.
Worse than that, they say that every woman that is killed, or murdered was so because of her sex, and not because of the many actual reasons.
 
Which is rather ironic considering how many "ignorant American" jokes I tell on a daily basis.
Legit, when I go to Bongland, I can't just go down to the corner store alone. How many times do you tell the clerk "what, what, huh, excuse me, what, say again" before you just give up?

Bongs speak terrible English.
 
I gave up on Netflix and Britain years ago.

Now I'm going to sit here on my front porch with my AR-15 drinking a Budweiser next to my pickup truck with the Confederate bumper sticker on it, smiling to myself about how I live in the land of freedom, and you limey bastards don't.
I'm still convinced that things will turn around one day because history has shown time and time again that it does, and the harder you push, the harder the pendulum hits you on the way back.

That said, the UK is tied with Germany for the most dystopian "civilized" country I can think of to the point where I rather pretend it doesn't exist. Every article that comes out of either is more depressing than the last.
 
I'm still convinced that things will turn around one day because history has shown time and time again that it does, and the harder you push, the harder the pendulum hits you on the way back.

That said, the UK is tied with Germany for the most dystopian "civilized" country I can think of to the point where I rather pretend it doesn't exist. Every article that comes out of either is more depressing than the last.
I can imagine myself in a British or German jail.

"I killed a man. What are you in for?"

"I...made fun of someone on the internet."

*cellmate shudders and begs to be taken to a different cell*

😂
Legit, when I go to Bongland, I can't just go down to the corner store alone. How many times do you tell the clerk "what, what, huh, excuse me, what, say again" before you just give up?

Bongs speak terrible English.
Let me guess, you called the biscuits cookies and your lorry a truck.
 
I went to Ireland a few years back, and it was still mostly white. But there were various browns/mystery meat "homeless" sleeping in doorways at night in the commercial areas.

I don't mean bad areas. I'm talking about the highest-rent tourist areas, like the best block of downtown Galway. The weird browns and their cheap blankets (obviously from local charities) started filling doorways minutes after shops closed.

It was creepy, and I've been to Gary Indiana, so it's not like I don't know fucked-up when I see it.
 
Haven't read all the responses.

First, what the students see on Netflix will have a far stronger impression on them than anything they are handed in school.

Second, believe the only effective counter is the parents discussing the show with their son(s) and showing them where the behavior depicted tin the show is wrong. Parents can also counter the show by setting a good example with their own relationship for their son(s). Won't apply in every case, but in many cases.
 
Did we watch the same show? The show repeatedly pushes the message that he killed her because he was angry she rejected him. He asked her out, she responded with, "I'm not that desperate", and then he stabbed her to death.

In the episode where the detective is interviewing teachers and students at the school, Andrew Tate, the "manosphere", "incels", and "the red pill" are brought up and are not dismissed. In the episode where the psychologist is interviewing Jamie, he tries to control and dominate the situation in such a way that we're supposed to interpret it as him trying to dominate her because she's a woman. In the last episode, the father says he thought his son was "safe in his room" because he was spending his time alone on the computer.

You're familiar with the literary concept of Chekov's Gun, right? You don't include something in a narrative unless it's in some way relevant to the story. There's a reason why these lines of dialogue were included. You're absolutely supposed to watch it and take away from it that the boy was influenced by things he saw on the Internet. The show is open-ended in suggesting what the solution to the 'issue' might be, but it is extremely direct and laser-focused on what it believes the issue is.
Disagree. The narrative absolutely does not directly insist "Jamie only did this because muh manosphere". The entire last sequence of episode four when the parents discuss 'we made him' and talk about their feelings of guilt about whether they somehow 'made' him this way would be completely meaningless if the programme was actually an afterschool special about how he got Radicalised On The Interwebs. The entire sequence about Stephen Graham's character and his own father and his struggles not to parent like his father did would be meaningless. The whole power of the script is that Jamie's parents aren't bad, or abusive, or unusual parents. They are normal people. The whole point of the first half of episode four is to show that they are nice people, likeable, funny. Jamie being The Way He Is would be very neatly explained by his parents being in some way dreadful, but... they aren't. This is not written to be a neat and tidy story.

You will remember Jamie does not stab her on the day she rejects him. She tells him she's not that desperate when he goes to her house in the immediate aftermath of photos of her being passed round school. They then exchange insults over a period of time on Instagram. The night he stabs her is some time afterwards. The script makes sure we know he got Ryan's knife from him prior to that night, but doesn't go for the full procedural "this is how she died" true crime style write up. We know he arms himself in advance and then follows her and kills her. But he does not kill her straight after the knockback in a fit of blind rage. I think that's really important to how the narrative is structured. There's a period of time in which he goes away and thinks about what he's going to do. And everything he thinks about and takes into consideration during that time, is something we are carefully not shown and not told.
 
It was creepy, and I've been to Gary Indiana, so it's not like I don't know fucked-up when I see it.
They're slaves to drug gangs usually. The lack of hard border with Northern Ireland makes it really easy from browns to hobo around the country if they're coming in from Bongland. Most people I know are just waiting to drown them all in a bog.
 
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