My feed
Premium

Please
or
to access all these features

Feminism: Sex & gender discussions

Nearly every mass killer is a man. Why aren’t we talking about that?

411 replies

CircleSquareCircleSquare · 27/04/2018 01:18

www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2018/apr/26/mass-killer-toronto-attack-man-men?

“After the Toronto attack, there should be a debate about toxic masculinity, and the issues of identity and rage that turn so many men towards violence”

I don’t dare to read the comments.

OP posts:
Report
Ereshkigal · 27/04/2018 01:54

Don't ever ever read Guardian comments about this topic!

Report
thebewilderness · 27/04/2018 03:41

When it is a white male terrorist it is a tragic case of nobody befriending the poor troubled d00d. That was the response to the bully who shot up the school in Florida.
The main reason the white men who control the microphone do not discuss toxic masculinity is the 10th rule of misogyny: The worst thing about male violence is that it makes men look bad.

Report
user764329056 · 27/04/2018 04:02

thebewilderness how sickeningly true

Report
flumpybear · 27/04/2018 04:55

I link violence with testosterone , perhaps levels which are greater than what's needed by the individuals body if you see what I mean - both men and women but there's more testosterone in men ... just my theory

Report
Smeddum · 27/04/2018 05:14

@thebewilderness I’ve wondered that many times myself. For some reason white men can commit the most awful of crimes and there’s always some kind of “mitigating factors” in the press. Which is bullshit.

Report
TheDowagerCuntess · 27/04/2018 05:43

Nearly every 'mass killer' is a man?

Nearly every killer is a man.

Men are very, very, very violent.

They're the greatest threat to humans - other men, women and children alike.

Why does nobody talk about it?

Report
Ekphrasis · 27/04/2018 06:29

I link violence with testosterone

Whilst I don't doubt that testosterone fires and fans flames, the true cause is rooted in how young boys are brought up to be; especially family and social factors denying them the ability to become emotionally literate. The resulting emotional turmoil either turns inwards (severe depression, additions and suicide) or outwards: violence.

Report
Ekphrasis · 27/04/2018 06:34

Pretty well explained by Javid Abdelmoneim on the bbc doc No more boys and girls.

Report
SweetGrapes · 27/04/2018 06:39

They're the greatest threat to humans

Why only humans? Just about every species in the planet.

Report
Typeractive · 27/04/2018 06:40

I heard that researchers now believe that testosterone does not drive aggressive behaviour, rather it drives risk taking.

So if not testosterone, what does cause male violence? I agree it's probably socialisation, in large part.

Report
Bowlofbabelfish · 27/04/2018 06:43

If you read the comments, you will understand why it’s an issue and why people don’t want to talk about it.

Guardian comments are the very cesspit of humanity

Report
womanformallyknownaswoman · 27/04/2018 06:45

Good question - the answer being most men will always side with other men.

they say one thing and do another -

does the media coverage alter at women's protests? No.

Do women's conditions alter materially through their protests? No.

Do men stand with women when their rights are under threat? Are men standing up presently and actively advocating for women in their fight to have their legal rights maintained - a very very few.

Do men award grants/ investment funds to women led businesses even though they perform better than male led ones - No.

When I realised men will rarely give anything up for women - money/ status/ power / media content - I realised little has changed for women since the Dark Ages. We have the vote but who is there to vote for - the choice is rigged and has been for eons

Report
womanformallyknownaswoman · 27/04/2018 06:53

I think the real question is - which men do to want us to open up - does the current system work well? No.

But we're led to believe it's the lesser of two evils. Chaos or this. But who does it benefit really? And are the men in power really the best to give our trust to?

Don't mean to derail - my thoughts led me into what I believe is the real issue and maybe I need to set up another post sometime- not feeling entitled to take up space today Confused

Report
meditrina · 27/04/2018 06:57

To take the exact question in your title, it's because mass murder is very rare, so it is unwise to put weight on any particular factors because the people concerned are so very few in numbers. Once a very rare event has happened, the 'sense' of what matters in relation to that incident is nearly always wrong.

Rare event/large deviation is not a place from which to look at more general societal phenomenon, and it's the basis of the 'why what you think is wrong' debunking books (based on actual evidence) come about.

So that's why the debate isn't, and shouldn't be, framed in those terms.

If looking at crime, and violent crime, it needs to be more specific. It is tempting to read across and make assumptions about what makes someone criminal. But it's a temptation that needs to be resisted, because there simply aren't enough points of commonality as more and different offences are considered (it's hard enough even when looking at a narrow group)

Why interventions don't work is a fascinating subject, and the short answer is often that people lumped assumptions in together.

Report
TheDowagerCuntess · 27/04/2018 08:01

But it's a temptation that needs to be resisted, because there simply aren't enough points of commonality

I beg to differ.

Care to tally up the number of violent female criminals versus male?

Violent nation states led by women versus men?

Report
PatriarchyPersonified · 27/04/2018 08:01

Men are responsible for most of the violence in every single society and culture on the planet.

The cross cultural nature of that statistic would indicate that its not a socialisation or cultural issue, its a genetic one.

Blaming socialisation and culture puts the cart before the horse.

Societies promote images of male violence precisely because of the underlying male predispositions towards conflict and risk taking.

Report
Bowlofbabelfish · 27/04/2018 08:11

Agree with patriarchy there.

The propensity to violence is there to begin with.

Socialisation acts as a brake or modifier on that latent tendency. It’s a restraining layer over the top.

What we do need to be careful of is the argument that violence is innate and thus inevitable and not truly men’s fault. We are a sentient species who are capable of modifying our behaviour. Evolutionary psychology is sometimes hijcaked as an excuse for behaviours rather than being confined to explanations of them.

Report
PatriarchyPersonified · 27/04/2018 08:16

Bowl

Agree completely. To clarify, a predisposition towards anything does not equal an excuse for that kind behaviour.

There is a big difference between a 'reason' that something happens and an 'excuse' for it.

Report
LaSqrrl · 27/04/2018 08:25

But it's a temptation that needs to be resisted, because there simply aren't enough points of commonality

Big wrong there! The commonality is that most, well in excess of 90% (and way higher in the serious violence stakes) violence, the perps are male. Most of the mass killers and serial killers, again male. Most of the DV abusers, male. Most major crime, male. Male, male, male, male.

Of course, the papers will milk any female violence story to the max - they are the exception. But if you count it on actual incidents, not coverage, male violence and criminality is the overwhelming pattern.

But further than that, media coverage will quite often minimise or excuse male violence, and emphasise female violence and denounce the perpetrator.

I am astounded that most people seem blinded to that pattern. Really, it is easy to spot (but patriarchy will shut you up about it).

I tend to agree with PatriarchyPersonified, it is a bit too widespread across time and space to write it off as conditioning. It's a flaw, a fundamental flaw.

Report
whatnow123 · 27/04/2018 08:29

I also think socialisation is acts as a break on male violence.

When societies break down in war etc male violence goes out of control. All social restrictions disappear. I think men are actually socialised to be less violent.

Report
LaSqrrl · 27/04/2018 08:31

Yes, what Bowl just said. Especially 'society is the cap'!

Six thousand years and counting, and males cannot get their violent shit under control? Well, either they very much like it that way, or they are beyond redemption. Take your pick, neither answer is terribly comforting.

Report
LaSqrrl · 27/04/2018 08:32

When 'societies break down' (primarily war) - the gloves are off - you see them for what they are, especially the rape and murder of women and children. That is inexcusable, really it is.

Report

Don’t want to miss threads like this?

Weekly

Sign up to our weekly round up and get all the best threads sent straight to your inbox!

Log in to update your newsletter preferences.

You've subscribed!

Babycham1979 · 27/04/2018 08:34

Indeed, the vast majority of violent criminals are men, violent states led by men, and risk-taking behaviour committed by men. Equally, the vast majority of scientific breakthroughs, artistic accomplishments and socially progressive breakthroughs have been delivered by men.

Many on thread seems to be attributing the ‘bad’ behaviours to some kind of innate masculinity, while ignoring the good as if they’re aberrant or simply a function of ‘patriarchy’. What if the same factors that drove the good, also drove the bad? What if equalising one set of behaviours between the sex’s also equalised the other?

Report
Alltheprettyseahorses · 27/04/2018 09:05

Equally, the vast majority of scientific breakthroughs, artistic accomplishments and socially progressive breakthroughs have been delivered by men

That's because, historically, it has overwhelmingly been men who have had the opportunity to achieve these things. Women couldn't go to university, stand for election and so on until very recently. Nevertheless, women are responsible for a lot more than people generally think, as women's achievements are too often ignored. Look at the case of Rosalind Franklin only a little over 60 years ago - the major player in discovering the structure of DNA and so on, yet she received almost no recognition for decades.

Report
Bowlofbabelfish · 27/04/2018 09:05

But it's a temptation that needs to be resisted, because there simply aren't enough points of commonality

I’ll offer you two biological examples.

  1. Bonobos vs chimps. Both almost identical genetically. Chimps are violent and engage in frequent rape and infanticide. They actively enjoy hunting and have a society structure that allows Male violence.

Bonobos are often said to have an matriarchal structure but that’s not true - what actually seems to happen is that the females engage in cooperative behaviour to clamp down on male violence. So there’s effectively a layer of socialisation over the innate tendency to violence. Note these species are about as similar as it’s possible to be genetically.

  1. XYY individuals - VASTLY over represented in the prison system and also vastly more likely to commit violent acts. Have higher testosterone levels.


Ok and another one :)

There are types of vole whose testosterone level drops through the floor after their mate gives birth. It lowers their tendency to violence and increases their tendency to cooperative parenting, increasing the success rate of breeding and raising mini voles.

Testosterone is linked to violence.
Report
Please create an account

To comment on this thread you need to create a Mumsnet account.