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Culture War Roundup for the week of September 18, 2023

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Unironically this is a male skill issue thinking that communication is only literal and verbal. Men who are confused about this need to get good, not only for dating but because this is an important generalizable life skill.

Women don’t “play hard to get” by failing to make or keep plans. An interested women, shy or forward, slutty or chaste, of any culture or nationality, will make an effort to meet with you. A woman “playing hard to get” will let you in on the game. It’s mutual flirting and it will feel like that.

If she cancels once and doesn’t take the initiative to make a new plan, she’s not interested. Move on, don’t be pathetic.

I do agree that an interested woman will make efforts to meet, but I also feel that dynamic is better expressed after an in-person meeting. Before an in-person meeting, if you're in any sort of metro online dating marketplace, you are one of a cast of 1000s in the inbox of anything female presenting.

The whole interaction really begins after/during the first in-person meeting

I mean, unironically agree.

But men need space to learn that. Not government regulation treating it as capital H, Harassment.

Men who are confused about this need to get good, not only for dating but because this is an important generalizable life skill A woman “playing hard to get” will let you in on the game. It’s mutual flirting and it will feel like that.

Of course when a guy like Andrew Tate says this and actively tries to teach males the skills to achieve these he gets hammered.

So I dunno where you expect them to learn the skills if the teaching of the skills is socially verboten, and the opposite message (believe women and take them at their word) is what saturates society.

From their fathers, maybe. But with an increase in the number of men growing up raised by single mothers, there really is no other place they can even see a role model demonstrate this for them.

Tate is...well. A less than savory role model. If you were being charitable to him he is LARPing as basically a villain. And that's a charitable interpretation of him.

I think probably the worst thing about the potential Australian law that kicked this convo off is that if implemented (and I sort of doubt it will be) it probably prevents a lot of necessary learning experiences to help you learn what is actual-mutual-flirting-everyone-is-having-a-good-coy-time and what is weird Andrew Tate rapey philosophy. But I don't think it's that hard. Women do obvious things like talk to you, make themselves available to spend time with you, touch you, kiss you, when they're interested. It's not a big mystery.

I've never seen any Tate stuff so I don't know what he says, but my data-less assumption is it's all tricks to get someone who is uninterested in you to fuck you, which is exactly the wrong, time-wasting approach.

Funny enough, Tate's approach is less about PUA and more about just maximizing your perceived value as a male (by doing things that produce value) so you don't have to trick someone. Now, his actions seem to contradict the message, but where else are men even going to hear that message.

I think probably the worst thing about the potential Australian law that kicked this convo off is that if implemented (and I sort of doubt it will be) it probably prevents a lot of necessary learning experiences to help you learn what is actual-mutual-flirting-everyone-is-having-a-good-coy-time and what is weird Andrew Tate rapey philosophy.

Yeah, I do think that young men are stuck between a Scylla and Charybdis when navigating dating culture. On one side if they are completely passive and let women make all the moves and rarely ever pursue they will never learn how to build attraction, play 'the game,' and eventually lock down a woman, and will lose out to the 'assholes.' And this leads them to loneliness, depression, and possibly lashing out.

On the other, if they try to be too brash and aggressive and don't properly gauge the risk involved, they can get slammed for at least being a sex pest, or at worst grooming and/or sexual assault which can carry severe reputational damage even if they avoid criminal consequences.

I will assert that having a male role model to show them the way is the best possible method of getting them into the 'sweet spot' of being assertive and confident but not stepping on the landmines, but that requires there to be such role models.

It's better to be too forward than to be too passive, since atleast being too forward allows you to get feedback which allows for calibration of your approach for the next time.

Considering he is facing multiple human trafficking, sex slavery and rape charges a magic eight ball would be a better source.

Good luck finding a 'better source' who is allowed to keep a platform with any reach.

They did it to Jordan Peterson, too.

Which is entirely the problem. "Positive" masculine role models are suppressed, so you end up with ONLY guys like Tate who are willing to keep speaking on the topic and fight through the backlash.

You want Andrew Tate to go away, give us someone who can say what he says without the boorish personality and background to with it.

You want Andrew Tate to go away, give us someone who can say what he says without the boorish personality and background to with it.

Except why would they do that, when the entire point of "the backlash" is to ensure that nobody can "say what he says."? You spoke above about how "young men are stuck between a Scylla and Charybdis when navigating dating culture." Well, if the movers and shakers of our culture want to remove anyone who would teach how to navigate that gap even as they expand the "landmines," and perhaps even eliminate said gap entirely. If they want to make our society one in which young men face a stark binary choice between "completely passive and let women make all the moves" and likely celibacy, and potentially-criminal "sex pest," what's to stop them (in the short term, at least)?

I guess this is just another example of my go to response whenever someone makes a "they can't do that" sort of argument, which is "what can you do about it?"

What specifically is it that Tate says that you find value in?

I'lI give you two people that I have considered helpful positive sources of information on dating, sex, etc - one focused on heterosexual dating, the other LGBT (but often with universally useful advice). I recall former notorious cad and "fratire" author Tucker Max's "Mate: Become The Man Women Want" book and podcast having quite useful advice for self improvement, along with an emphasis on explcitly spelling out how different male behavior can be threatening to women, how to be conscious of and avoid such behavior, what to do instead, and knowing when one has consent. He hasn't been deplatformed for it. Dan Savage is another guy with good dating, sex and self improvement advice who's been running columns for decades. Both dated around a lot before being happily married, have kids, etc. Tucker is more right wing, Savage more left wing.

What specifically is it that Tate says that you find value in?

He is willing to tell men that they aren't, in fact, the problem with society, and that they are in fact capable of becoming better than they are now through hard work and perseverance, and that they don't have to sacrifice their personal/masculine preferences in the process.

And more specifically, he points out that the culture IS in fact slanted heavily against men, and that they have to get up and do great things anyway.

And for whatever the hell it is worth, he's actually been in professional fights, so there's some level of authenticity to the persona.

To me that is perhaps the major issue with most 'manosphere' influencers. They're not particularly capable of backing up the braggadocio. They project the image they need to but that is it.

Vs. somebody who has been in the shit and gotten punched in the face and pushed through it.

   

The very fact that you're recommending as alternatives to read books written by persons whose only real achievement of note is writing books indicates you kind of misunderstand what males look for in a role model or guide.

I am not who you're responding to, but I would probably rather sit in dull silence than read a book titled "Become the man women want." And I would expect to be mocked ruthlessly by my friends for doing so. Having said this, I admittedly have not read it and cannot comment on its contents.

If what you are doing to find relationships and sex has already worked out successfully to your satisfaction, then you are unlikely the intended audience who'd benefit from some Tucker and Dan.

If what you're doing is not working, entertain the notion that your impulses and assumptions when it comes to this area of life don't have a good track record and the solutions are likely to come from outside of your current comfort zone.

Without a doubt, every word of what you write is true according to my own experience. However I would suggest that "outside my comfort zone" takes many, many (probably for me more than most) forms. I would further suggest that in this particular circumstance, considering the issues at hand (namely, how to negotiate one's way through what can seem at times like an absolute maze built in a foggy quagmire known as "How to interact with women so that you can have some sort of sex life (but also adhere to some sort of moral standard)", then following some Procrustean rulebook to adhere to the Wants of Women is, perhaps counterintuitively, not the way to approach it. For an abundance of reasons, none of which I would argue have anything to do with misogyny or even lack of concern for women.

Mind you my issue is with Tucker 's title, which I think needs reworking. Maybe he means "the man women want viscerally without knowing why" as opposed to how I took it, which is "the man you think a woman feels is a good match." The former is doable within reason. The latter is a pathway to nowhere, and reminds me of those who deride what they call "toxic masculinity" and suggest a certain passive docility is what would heal us all.

A guy like Andrew Tate who pimped women? Gee I wonder why his spin on "mutual flirting" got him hammered.

Or Jordan Peterson.

Or Matt Walsh.

They even tried cancelling Joe Rogan.

Good luck finding a personality who takes a 'pro masculinity' approach who isn't vilified in the mainstream.

That is, in fact, the reason Tate is able to find an audience. There's NOWHERE ELSE for the audience to go.

I think this explanation excludes the reality that often women simply change their minds.

I've been in the exact situation you describe, I asked her out, she ignored my message. I then asked her out again a week later. She said yes, we ended up dating for several years.

Of course, that just makes it even harder for our would be suitor. Her saying she's busy means she's not interested, unless she's genuinely busy but still expects you to take the initiative to ask her out again. Or she's not sure if she's interested and can't be bothered to make a decision the first time you ask. Or she is interested but slightly more interested in another guy, and asking her out after he ignores her texts could go well for you.

God I don't miss the dating game at all.

I think this explanation excludes the reality that often women simply change their minds.

Or just there's a bunch of occluding factors. If dating was a simple peer-to-peer two-player game a lot of this would be more intuitive, but there are so many factors going into success and failure.

Maybe she said no the first time since she was dating another guy, maybe she'd given up on online dating that day and rediscovered her resolve a week later since her best friend met a nice guy on Hinge, maybe she was in a bad mood, maybe you were one of 10,000 messages in her inbox and didn't pitch anything super interesting etc etc etc