Of course. I’ve never said I don’t want stories to depict toxic masculinity. Stories can depict toxic masculinity in ways that are critical of it rather than in ways that celebrate and glorify it.
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Because toxic masculinity costs lives every day. We as a culture have a real problem, a very dangerous problem, with our understanding of what it means to be a man.
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1) Not what she said. 2) Violent media doesn’t cause a monkey see/monkey do effect but it does modulate attitudes towards violence. It may or may not make people more violent but it makes them more accepting of violence.
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I said toxic masculinity causes real world violence. This is indisputable.
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Replying to @carolynmichelle @VideoNinja
This conversation isn’t about stopping instances of real-world violence, though one benefit of a world in which masculinity wasn’t so linked to domination through violence would be less such violence. It’s about creating a more just and equitable culture for everyone.
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Your first statement makes no sense. Of course masculinity is linked to violence. What percentage of school shootings and mass shootings are committed by men? How many men use violence or threats of violence on women they’re in relationships with vs. women doing the same?
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