CadetMahoney
Member
Have any of the mainstream television news mentioned anything about virginity and so on in their reports, they tend to shy away from anything to do with sex and censor the info to more neutral language.
Which is a byproduct of his obvious sense of entitlement. And massively fragile ego.
So fragile in fact, that anything short of absolute and effortless dominance of pretty much every situation and person he comes across is a a direct and vicious slight.
I'm not going to lie but i do a lot of times feel the way the killer felt , not in a sense that i wanna kill somebody but just that I sometimes feel alone. I a lot of times force myself to go to parties and stuff but when i'm there I just feel like i don't belong there or do people really want me to be there. I guess you can say I have an inferiority complex and it takes a toll on my self esteem.
Interesting read which I happen to agree with...
Misogyny Didn’t Turn Elliot Rodger Into a Killer
Rodger appears to have indeed been a misogynist, but this misogyny appears to have raged from within, a product of his anger, sexual frustrations and despondency rather than anything “taught” to him by society. Had he not been so focused on his own sexual inadequacies, his focus might simply have moved to mall-goers rather than sorority sisters.
A good point made right here but something I'd like to address:
I don't think it was sexual inadequacy tbh. I haven't read his manifesto but just from watching a couple of his videos its obvious he's not sex crazed, its something else entirely. What seems to be a central focus is that he desires is pure validation from society. Validation from his peers. Which falls in with his isolated troubled past.
Yes he cries about being a virgin in every video, but why didn't he spend time with the pretend girlfriends his father tried to arrange for him, or considered rape or prostitution? Because it didn't give him validation. He wanted that validation and acceptance in his society, not sex! Inside his brain, getting attention from the hottest blonde in his school meant getting that validation from society, and that, to me, seems to be the reason why he laments his situation. Being desired by such women would mean he was being accepted and acknowledged by society from which he felt alienated.
That's his narcissism at play. But people with narcissistic personality disorder do go on to achieve high job posts in society. But those people don't have the coupling of further mental deterioration which hampers their social skillset. They are still able to integrate with society despite despising most of their peers and co-workers! Rodger's mind didn't have that capability to integrate with society due to his Aspeger's, bullying history, etc. He got sidelined from society by his own behavior. It all culminated in frustration and ultimately reached a boiling point where he felt he needed to fight back and kill that very own society that kicked him to the curb.
(Cause they're racist too.)It's weird noticing the differences some posters in forums I visit are treating Rodger compared to Tryavon Martin. With Rodgers their saying they understand where he was coming from and he was just a poor guy who was mentally ill; compared with Martin where they described him as a violent thug who attacked Zimmerman and was responsible for getting himself killed. Its just strange how some people can have sympathy for someone who killed six people, yet have none for someone killed while walking home.
It's weird noticing the differences some posters in forums I visit are treating Rodger compared to Tryavon Martin. With Rodgers their saying they understand where he was coming from and he was just a poor guy who was mentally ill; compared with Martin where they described him as a violent thug who attacked Zimmerman and was responsible for getting himself killed. Its just strange how some people can have sympathy for someone who killed six people, yet have none for someone killed while walking home.
It's weird noticing the differences some posters in forums I visit are treating Rodger compared to Tryavon Martin. With Rodgers their saying they understand where he was coming from and he was just a poor guy who was mentally ill; compared with Martin where they described him as a violent thug who attacked Zimmerman and was responsible for getting himself killed. Its just strange how some people can have sympathy for someone who killed six people, yet have none for someone killed while walking home.
But are these ideas external to him and others, like say, a religion or cult? Or are they internal and going outward, making the forums you see a symptom of a broader underlying issue? I feel that the former is just not believable. The feelings of resentment, the anger - those things that cause them to congregate in the dark recesses of the internet, they're coming from within. This stuff transcends all national and cultural borders and is grappled with on a daily basis by the entire world. It's not a religion, it's not a dogma. It's just pure negative emotion.
Some people may call it entitlement, but I can kind of see that someone in that position is obviously going to be extremely frustrated and sad. We're hard-wired to seek out sex and relationship, we can't escape it, and so rejection is always going to have some negative consequence. The difference with Rodger was, the way he perceived things and reacted to things was extreme.
Feeling rejected does not have to lead to violent anger (or any anger for that matter). Not having women chase you as you drive down the street in an expensive car does not have to lead to feeling rejected. It's not obviously or logically going to happen. But it can if you combine it with misogyny; if you combine it with a hateful and objectifying framework in which women are objects that belong to those with high status, making them evil for not recognizing his high status, and for hanging out with people of lesser status.
Speaking naively of "feeling rejected" is painful to keep reading in this thread when the "rejected" party rejects most of the world as worthless, through reasons of misogyny and racism, and is angry that the women he accepts as attractive (without an iota of empathy for them as humans) are not flocking to him for his expensive car and glasses. Come on.
Yes, he perceived it as being unfairly rejected. But that perception was already heavily colored by hatred and objectification.
It's weird noticing the differences some posters in forums I visit are treating Rodger compared to Tryavon Martin. With Rodgers their saying they understand where he was coming from and he was just a poor guy who was mentally ill; compared with Martin where they described him as a violent thug who attacked Zimmerman and was responsible for getting himself killed. Its just strange how some people can have sympathy for someone who killed six people, yet have none for someone killed while walking home.
Or with dzhokhar tsarnaev people do the logical thing and call him a terrorist and monster. I don't seem to recall there being a big lengthy discussion over the governments policies towards muslim nations or other people trying to understand his plight.
It's weird noticing the differences some posters in forums I visit are treating Rodger compared to Tryavon Martin. With Rodgers their saying they understand where he was coming from and he was just a poor guy who was mentally ill; compared with Martin where they described him as a violent thug who attacked Zimmerman and was responsible for getting himself killed. Its just strange how some people can have sympathy for someone who killed six people, yet have none for someone killed while walking home.
I'm not going to lie but i do a lot of times feel the way the killer felt , not in a sense that i wanna kill somebody but just that I sometimes feel alone. I a lot of times force myself to go to parties and stuff but when i'm there I just feel like i don't belong there or do people really want me to be there. I guess you can say I have an inferiority complex and it takes a toll on my self esteem.
Well, with Trayvon he was the victim.
These are bad comparisons mainly because with Rodger there's video and extensive written insight into what he was thinking. With Treyvon we only saw the prosecution and trial and the mud flinging by both sides. And with Dzhokhar there actually were people that showed sympathy simply because it was found out that he was basically brainwashed and groomed by his older brother. That didn't excuse his actions though. He turned into a monster. Just like Rodger. Not sure anyone would disagree with calling him that.
In a previous incident, Rodger "wrote that he tried to shove 'girls' at a party over a ledge, but he couldn't do it, and then men rushed to him and pushed him over". He stated that he "felt a snap in [his] ankle, followed by a stinging pain" and "tried to get away from there as fast as [he] could". Realizing that he left his Gucci sunglasses at the social gathering, Rodger returned to retrieve them but the "same people he had tangled with before began mocking him and calling him names, then dragged him into the driveway to beat him up". One of Rodger's neighbors stated that "he saw Rodger come home, crying" and said that Rodger claimed that he was going to kill the men who attacked him, and "kill myself".[57] Rodger also stalked and threw coffee on a couple and two girls sitting at a bus-stop for not paying attention to him as well as assaulting a group playing kickball as documented in his manifesto.[64] He also admitted to a childhood friend that he wanted to "hold down and rape women".[65]
Yeah her face is the top item on the home page, right across from his. Really disgusting.
Apologies if this has already been posted (i scanned back a few pages and didn't see it)
Elliot Rodger and the Price of Toxic Masculinity by Dr Nerdlove.
You can be both mentally ill and a misogynist. They're not mutually exclusive.They interviewed her father. They got paid.
Also, is it accurate to say he hated women in general? From reading his manifesto it's clear the only thing that would make him happy would be to have a girlfriend and be able to kiss and hold her. I get why his simplistic idea of a girlfriend could be perceived as misogynistic, but I still think it's too easy to label him a women-hater and be done with it.
He seemed to hate the women who he subconsciously perceived as too good for him, and the pretty ones who chose to be with other men. But he also seemed to hate the men just as much for stealing the women away from him and possessing the attributes he did not have.
He hated everyone who felt wronged him, and to me it was more complex than him being a misogynist.
I mean sure, he wanted to round women up into concentration camps and kill them. Or possibly just hold them down and rape them.
And sure, he actually did try to push completely random women off ledges or fling coffee on them or whatever.
But was he really a misogynist?
Also, is it accurate to say he hated women in general? From reading his manifesto it's clear the only thing that would make him happy would be to have a girlfriend and be able to kiss and hold her. I get why his simplistic idea of a girlfriend could be perceived as misogynistic, but I still think it's too easy to label him a women-hater and be done with it.
Elliot Rodger said:Women are like a plague. They don't deserve any rights. Their wickedness must be contained in order to prevent future generations from falling into degeneracy. Women are vicious, evil, barbaric animals, and they need to be treated as such.
I mean sure, he wanted to round women up into concentration camps and kill them. Or possibly just hold them down and rape them.
And sure, he actually did try to push completely random women off ledges or fling coffee on them or whatever.
But was he really a misogynist?
Also, is it accurate to say he hated women in general? From reading his manifesto it's clear the only thing that would make him happy would be to have a girlfriend and be able to kiss and hold her. I get why his simplistic idea of a girlfriend could be perceived as misogynistic, but I still think it's too easy to label him a women-hater and be done with it.
I find it really, really upsetting that all the women that were posting in this thread where completely dismissed and drowned out in favor of 'no true misogynist'.
And now everyone is discussing how much he wasn't a misogynist so we don't have to worry about that, he was just crazy.
They interviewed her father. They got paid.
Also, is it accurate to say he hated women in general? From reading his manifesto it's clear the only thing that would make him happy would be to have a girlfriend and be able to kiss and hold her. I get why his simplistic idea of a girlfriend could be perceived as misogynistic, but I still think it's too easy to label him a women-hater and be done with it.
He seemed to hate the women who he subconsciously perceived as too good for him, and the pretty ones who chose to be with other men. But he also seemed to hate the men just as much for stealing the women away from him and possessing the attributes he did not have.
He hated everyone who felt wronged him, and to me it was more complex than him being a misogynist.
If we ignore the problem it'll go away, right?
One of his quotes from a incel board stated that his fellows should "Start envisioning a world where WOMEN FEAR YOU."
The last few paragraphs of his thesis include:
He hated women in general. Women that he saw and women that he didn't see.
Generally it'd be recommended to read all of the book before commenting on the ending. Or at least get Cliff Notes. (I recommend the ones by The One Who Knocks")Well, shit.
Clearly he really unleashed the crazy later on. I genuinely hadn't read that yet.
There's two versions of it.The pushback against the misogyny stuff is so strange. Whats the reason for it? Is it just people who are tired of hearing about misogyny kneejerk reacting without reading the details?
The pushback against the misogyny stuff is so strange. Whats the reason for it? Is it just people who are tired of hearing about misogyny kneejerk reacting without reading the details?
Did we really read the same manifesto? He wanted to put EVERY woman on earth in concentration camps and let them starve to death, save a few to be used as breeding machines. He tried to push a random girl of a ledge, he threw coffee at girls.
He didn't actually want a girlfriend... he wanted a hot tall blonde trophy because he felt he deserved it more than those slobs and dirty mexicans/asians/blacks who actually dated.
Its due to Racism, plain and simple
and no one should have sympathy for this punk, he wrote a god damn manifesto about "retribution day" where he would get revenge against the world because women didn't give him the pleasure he felt he deserved. Dude was an insane scumbag before he was murderer.
The pushback against the misogyny stuff is so strange. Whats the reason for it? Is it just people who are tired of hearing about misogyny kneejerk reacting without reading the details?
I find it really, really upsetting that all the women that were posting in this thread where completely dismissed and drowned out in favor of 'no true misogynist'.
And now everyone is discussing how much he wasn't a misogynist so we don't have to worry about that, he was just crazy.
Militant feminism is still on the nose. Across the internet I get the sense a lot of people have been put out by 'feminists' jumping on this case and using it as a vehicle for their message.
You should see some of the stuff that Caitlin Stasey (actress from Reign who is a proud feminist) has been copping (and giving back) on Twitter. Pretty sad stuff.
I dunno bro, maybe it's time you read his wiki entry at least, rather than posting on GAF about how not misogynist his worldview is.
Actually, I can assure you, that for me at least, I am not claiming he wasn't misogynist. The argument seems to be however, that his misogyny was somehow projected on him by society, that it is society that is to blame for this. Society is where he somehow got these toxic views that all women must be killed.
My point however has always been that, I don't really see why this view is more plausible than the fact that he actually had problems forming relationships and developed a view that all women hated him. He didn't understand why women were so repulsed by him, he said in one video.
Isn't it at least reasonable to suggest that the reason he became so misogynistic was because of a built up anger from constant rejection, and perhaps a delusional sense that all women hated him?
And another thing I disagree with is people's insistence to try and trivialise the extent in which mental illness plays in this. It is true that a huge percentage of people suffering with mental illness will turn into mass murderers, but we're not talking about all cases, we're talking about this particular case. And the truth is, there is a strong correlation between mental illness and mass shooting. Also, considering his mental issues were a part of what defined his personality and view of reality, they are relevant to the discussion.
That time article makes a good point actually, that we should be focusing on improving the mental health system rather than undermining it. If people want to focus on the misogynistic aspects of it as they feel it is important to do so, that is fine, but don't do so at the expense of the other obvious underlying issue he had which needs to be brought to attention and thought about being improved.
The pushback against the misogyny stuff is so strange. Whats the reason for it? Is it just people who are tired of hearing about misogyny kneejerk reacting without reading the details?
D:PAU sites
People aren't pure blank slates that society pours itself into...
but neither are they the product of only the things that happen to them personally, with no influence from the outside.
Sure, it wouldn't be correct to say that "society" by itself and alone turned this guy into a misogynist. But it's reasonable to suggest that while his life experience of not immediately getting what he thought he was owed may have pushed him in a certain direction, the toxic mess of misogynist garbage he frequently bathed in (take a look at some of the sites he posted on) pulled him further along that path.
You can't be rejected if never actually approach people. He believed that women were owed to him because he was a superior alpha male, and was pissed they weren't flocking to him.
And I am not dismissing mental illness. I think the only thing that separates him from (hopefully) the majority of people that spew similar rhetoric on PAU sites or the Red Pill was mental illness.