Am I the only person who sees this article as a major milestone? Like for real, someone should sticky this. But what the 2010's era that the author speaks about meshes almost perfectly in line with the late Millennial men who I write about below going to high school (late 2000s-early mid 2010s) and college (early mid 2010s-mid 2010s). It is an weird phenomenon that most men born in the 1990s and 2000s (i.e most late Millennial men) agree with the core principles of feminism but they distance themselves from the feminist movement itself. I have observed men begin feminist talking points with other men by saying stuff like "I am not a feminist, but.." and I believe a significant part of this is that the feminism that those men were exposed to during their formative years, was of the "men r trash" variety. The 2010's culture of pop-feminism left a bad taste in the mouths of a lot of young men, and that negative first impression of feminism opened the door f...
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