Culture What is really going on with Gen Alpha boys?

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By Halima Jibril

At the start of the year, the Financial Times reported that a new gender divide is emerging worldwide. While there has been consistent debate over whether Gen Z is the most progressive generation in history or the most conservative, there was a point in the latter part of the 2010s when many believed that the world needed to change and that Gen Z as a whole would be the ones to make it better. But this new research tells a less idealistic story.

Through an analysis of General Social Surveys and Election Studies in Korea, Germany, the US and the UK, data journalist John Burn-Murdoch found that in the UK, Gen Z women are 25 percentage points more liberal than Gen Z men. In Germany and the US, Gen Z women are 30 percentage points more liberal than the men in their generation. The voting patterns of young men around the world also highlight their more conservative leanings: In the Polish elections last year, almost half of the men aged 18 to 21 voted for the far-right Confederation party, and in South Korea, young men largely voted for the right-wing People Power party in 2022.

Many believe this divide is the result of backlash towards feminist movements such as #MeToo and the fact that popular feminism, while still challenged, was able to enter mainstream discourse successfully. Even though backlash towards feminist progression is normal, as Susan Faludi wrote in her 1991 text Backlash: The Undeclared War Against American Women, acknowledging its normalcy should not make us complacent. These statistics are worrying, as those with conservative ideals are more likely to display violent anti-women, anti-immigration and racist attitudes openly, and there is a possibility that the divide will grow further.

As soon as I heard this news, I immediately thought about Gen Alpha boys (born between 2010 and 2025) and Gen Z’s youngest members (often lumped in with Gen Alpha). A generation already described as illiterate, lazy, rude and ignorant, not just by the usual suspects (Gen X and Baby Boomers) but also by older members of Gen Z, who not too long ago suffered the same critiques from older generations. While there is an unnecessary moral panic surrounding Gen Alpha, worries about how they understand their gender, the gender of others and gender roles are rightful causes for concern. Just this week, the leader of the UK’s largest education union called for an independent inquiry into the rise of sexism and misogyny among boys and young men, describing it as “a huge issue” in schools. With the prevalence of misogynistic male influencers on social media, many believe that Gen Alpha boys are “not going to be OK” and are already “doomed.”

But are they really doomed? Or is what’s going on with Gen Alpha boys more complex than the pessimistic picture being painted?

My son is 10, and when I asked him if he knew who Andrew Tate was he said although the had never watched him, he heard some of his classmates talking about him a few times. That day I had to have a 1 hour conversation with him about how dangerous that man is.

— Mauvaise Pute 🧚🏾‍♀️ (@jenny_gxo) June 20, 2023

“I believe an element of this is unprecedented,” explains John*, a 23-year-old working at an educational charity. “[One of my] colleagues’ parents has been a teacher for decades and says she sees more misogyny and homophobia in schools now than ever before. There are waves of online content reaching young men, and nobody, including us, knows exactly what to do.” Andrew Tate, who is now facing extradition to the UK over rape and human trafficking claims, is still one of the main misogynistic influencers that John hears young boys speak about. “They regurgitate ideas and phrases of his. These sometimes are shown through their idea of what a man should be, involving being a ‘Top G,’ ‘providing for your family.’ They make fun of women and their appearance regularly. People who counter their ideas, especially women, are seen as dangerous and liars.”

One of the reasons young men find themselves so attracted to Tate, as John highlights, is because he teaches them how to exist in the world. In her book Collapse Feminism, writer and video essayist Alice Cappelle argues that while some young men do go out of their way to look for misogynistic content online, others are simply looking for self-improvement tips. Since influencers like Tate and Jordan Peterson brand themselves as “self-help” gurus, selling courses on how to be a ‘Top G’, attract the right kind of women and achieve financial freedom,
impressionable boys and young men believe they’ve discovered the secret to performing their gender “correctly” and succeeding in life.

“Tate will become cringe eventually. The problem is the trail of misogynistic destruction he has left behind” – Issa

It’s easy to put sole blame on individuals like Tate (or even on pornography, as the teachers’ union leaders are doing) for the rise in misogyny among young men, but we already live in an incredibly gendered society. Even when we don’t think we’re pushing a gendered ideology, most of the time, we are, and young people internalise that way of thinking very quickly. For example, in her book, The Will To Change: Men, Masculinity and Love, bell hooks highlights how mothers can be some of the biggest perpetrators of patriarchy. “The single mom who insists that her boy child, ‘be a man’ is not anti-patriarchal; she is enforcing patriarchal will,” she writes. 23-year-old history teacher Lauren, who has been a victim of misogynistic catcalling at her school, similarly agrees with hooks’ sentiments. “I think many issues within school, including children’s perception of gender, come from the parents at home. So regardless of what we can do in school, I don’t think this has a great impact unless we educate their parents, which is extremely hard to do.”

28-year-old Issa*, an English teacher in an inner city secondary school, believes our focus should not be on individuals like Tate because teenagers are incredibly fickle. “Tate will become cringe eventually. The problem is the trail of misogynistic destruction he has left behind.” This is where charities like Beyond Equality come into play. Founded in 2016, they facilitate workshops in schools, universities, workplaces, sports teams, and other community groups, focusing on boys and men. They explore topics such as physical and mental well-being, gender-based violence, and healthy relationships. “We help them understand their position in the patriarchy and support them in contributing to a more gender-equitable world,” Tomara Garrod, volunteer and community manager of Beyond Equality, tells Dazed.

“Teenagers are used to being told by adults what they should believe, how they should behave, and being punished when they don’t follow these rules. But many are more than willing to have a sensitive, nuanced conversation as long as they feel they’ll be genuinely listened to and respected” – Tomara Garrod

Beyond Equality believes that one of the best ways to support boys who find themselves drawn to misogynistic content is by speaking with them honestly. “To actually have transformative, liberatory conversations about misogyny, we have to be able to face it openly and without judgement,” explains Garrod. “Teenagers are used to being told by adults what they should believe, how they should behave, and being punished when they don’t follow these rules. But many are more than willing to have a sensitive, nuanced conversation as long as they feel they’ll be genuinely listened to and respected. Many engage far more critically with the content they consume than we might assume. What they need is a space to engage and encourage this critical thinking, one rooted in curiosity, compassion, and justice.”

The work done by organisations like Beyond Equality is much more impactful than just placing “positive” male influencers in schools, as Labour proposed in February. While the idea is nice on paper, as Cappelle argues in Collapse Feminism, “the goal should not be to switch one type of masculinity (toxic) to another type of masculinity (healthy/positive), but rather to reject the idea that the formation of one’s identity, meaning one’s value system and tastes, can only mediate through a fixed gender expression.” In other words: “it is time to imagine the formation of a man’s identity outside of the constraints of masculinity and outside of the constraints of a fixed definition.”

It takes all of us, not just teachers and those who work in charities, to dismantle and challenge patriarchal culture, and we must do it together if we do not want the ideological gender divide to deepen.
 
I'll believe it when I see it. I remember 8 years ago when all the WN boys were raving about how based and racist "Generation Zyklon" was gonna be, then they all started eating Tide Pods and saying they were non-binary.
The women did, which was the point of the article lol.

those with conservative ideals are more likely to display violent anti-women, anti-immigration and racist attitudes openly, and there is a possibility that the divide will grow further.
How curious that they tie these together.
If I don’t want bulb heads or pakis imported to rape the woman of my country, does that make me a misogynist?
 
I’m not sure why they are trying to push for a men vs. women war. Men are fundamentally bigger, stronger, and smarter than women. The women will lose no matter what. There’s no way around this. Hopefully it doesn’t actually come to it, but when men get pushed far enough they turn into this very quickly:
IMG_1383.jpeg
 
If I don’t want bulb heads or pakis imported to rape the woman of my country, does that make me a misogynist?
apparently
I’m not sure why they are trying to push for a men vs. women war. Men are fundamentally bigger, stronger, and smarter than women. The women will lose no matter what. There’s no way around this. Hopefully it doesn’t actually come to it, but when men get pushed far enough they turn into this very quickly:
View attachment 5907600
look, they're not very bright
yes, because the women of your country DO want that
View attachment 5907602
shitter isn't really a good place for finding real examples
i mean, do these people have a blog or something that can back up meaningless tweets?
a link to other social media?
 
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My son is 10, and when I asked him if he knew who Andrew Tate was he said although the had never watched him, he heard some of his classmates talking about him a few times. That day I had to have a 1 hour conversation with him about how dangerous that man is.

— Mauvaise Pute
Lemme guess, single mom who votes with her pussy and has no qualms about her son being fiddled by drag freaks and niggers.
 
Lemme guess, single mom who votes with her pussy and has no qualms about her son being fiddled by drag freaks and niggers.
>"Wow, I sure don't want my son watching this guy. I better make sure to tell him a bunch of bullshit he's going to tell his friends, who are going to make him watch it because he's talking nonsense."
woman moment
 
IDK what it is, but the liberal use of the adjective Boys by journals leaves a very eugch taste in my mouth. When I was 13, folks referred to me as young man, not boy. Also nobody off the Internet truly believe that all of Gen Alpha are the negative stereotypes depicted in this article. Half of the ones I've encountered work harder than millennials; yeah they are a little nuts but at least they arrive on time.
 
i've read bits and pieces about that, but because i don't speak korean i could never really get into in-depth real information about it
i think it went back to this woman who was close to the president at the time, and also the daughter of some notorious cult leader
According to my krn friends the feminist death cult shadow government went full cultural night of the long knives. Think nigger male on white woman enforced on tv but in every nook and cranny of culture and enforced by ritual vivisection.
 
Also nobody off the Internet truly believe that all of Gen Alpha are the negative stereotypes depicted in this article. Half of the ones I've encountered work harder than millennials; yeah they are a little nuts but at least they arrive on time.
Wdym? Gen Alpha started in the 2010s. Most aren't even 15 yet.

This nigga is running a child labor sweatshop in Vietnam isn't he.
 
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Wdym? Gen Alpha started in the 2010s. Most aren't even 15 yet.
I don't know acronyms longer than three letters.

Also, it is a sign of respect. Boy denotes that they don't know anything and are still child like. Young man is at least slightly respecting and giving them a sense of authority but not quite the same level as an adult. That's my opinion, take it or leave it. I'm not going to play the semantics game of age because my opinion isn't about age.
 
I don't know acronyms longer than three letters.

Also, it is a sign of respect. Boy denotes that they don't know anything and are still child like. Young man is at least slightly respecting and giving them a sense of authority but not quite the same level as an adult. That's my opinion, take it or leave it. I'm not going to play the semantics game of age because my opinion isn't about age.
You said they work harder than Millennials and arrive on time. Unless you're hiring middle schoolers and high school freshmen........
 
You said they work harder than Millennials and arrive on time. Unless you're hiring middle schoolers and high school freshmen I doubt that.
Gen Alpha boys (born between 2010 and 2025)

Read niggah.

Edit:
I'm gonna leave this here unedited to display my momentary lapse retardation. I see your point and got them confused with zoomers and alphas; the article is difficult to read and now; recontextualized and corrected by a black man's underwear...
 
This thread is great. In 2 mere pages the mis-definitions of what feminism is abound at every corner.

Notably written by the imbeciles this article relates to - stupid young men.

If this this thread was about on-line gaming there wouldn’t be an mis-definition anywhere.
Feminists have never come out and said exactly what feminism is, modern ones anyway.

If they have, I don't recall it, or it was general platitudes towards fairness and freedom which nobody disagrees with.

Or shrieking about "representation" and "equality", the two biggest poison pills of DEI.

So if we're confused about what feminists want? There's a reason. They won't tell us what this "equality" and "representation" is.

They've, in fact, regressed to the point that they can't even define "woman".
 
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I believe this is a case of parents hysterically overreacting to a perceived threat and making it worse. Take this quote:
My son is 10, and when I asked him if he knew who Andrew Tate was he said although the had never watched him, he heard some of his classmates talking about him a few times. That day I had to have a 1 hour conversation with him about how dangerous that man is.
If her ten year old wasn't thinking about Andrew Tate before this conversation then he definitely is now.

Andrew Tate is a grifter who scams lonely men out of their money. You don't really have to say anything more about him than that. The more he's puffed up as some antihero of disaffected masculinity the more undue importance you're giving him.

Here's my suggestion: Stop telling teenage boys what they have to think. Give them the space to come to their own conclusions on things. The more you ram messaging about "equality and diversity" down their throats, the more they're going to be turned off by it.

DARE didn't stop teenagers from wanting to do drugs, if anything it did the opposite and made them more curious about trying them. Why would using DARE's failed tactics that didn't work for drugs thirty years ago to combat bigotry and misogyny be any different?
 
but aside from that the real story should be young women veering wildly towards the left over the past decade. I'm sure that unlike the incels and tatertots these increasingly radicalized women will have no negative effects on society whatsoever.
The last gasp of a dying movement, literally. Birth rates have been so bad that there are literally no women left to carry on the torch except for the daughters of right-wingers. Who increasingly have little reason to side with the left. Feminism is a fire burning the house of society thinking that as it expands into new rooms, it will always stay this hot, this intense, never realizing that its destroying the very thing it needs to live.
 
Feminists have never come out and said exactly what feminism is, if they have, I don't recall it.

They've, in fact, regressed to the point that they can't even define "woman".
I believe it is men who have had the problem of defining a woman given it seems all the troons are trying to become women.

And as for feminism your inability to define it only reveals ignorance so how do you complain about something you can’t even define?. The idea feminism alone changed an ENtIRE generation of women is also absurd.

Some men see getting a woman as a challenge and worthy of the pursuit; whereas these young men treat it as an expected asset along with their PlayStation and car.

Men chase things. It’s the pursuit; and now they whine even about that. How pathetic.
 
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