A Bit Fruity with Matt Bernstein - The Incel to ICE Pipeline (with F.D Signifier and Caroline Kwan)
Episode Date: February 6, 2026ICE is many things — chief among them, an outgrowth of a seemingly neverending masculinity crisis. The U.S. government has devised a billion dollar strategy to recruit aggrieved young men into ICE w...ith the promise of giving them a purpose: to “restore the homeland.” And their masculinity. The results have been devastating. A parallel crisis of manhood is unfolding in the form of looksmaxxers, a booming online community of men injecting meth and breaking their bones to enhance their perceived physical beauty. Today, YouTube essay legend F.D Signifier, Twitch culture streamer Caroline Kwan and I explore the evermore bizarre ways patriarchy is setting men up to fail while everyone else pays the price. Listen to bonus episodes on Patreon! Thanks to today’s sponsors! Protect yourself online, wherever you go. Get a discount on NordVPN at https://www.nordvpn.com/fruity Work smarter, not harder, with Factor meals ready in two minutes at https://www.factormeals.com/fruity50off Watch F.D Signifier on YouTube. Watch Caroline on Twitch. Find me on Instagram. Find A Bit Fruity on Instagram. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Yeah, the masculine urge to just kill a woman.
That's fucking bleak.
Back to a bit fruity.
I'm Matt Bernstein.
I'm so happy that you're here.
After ICE agent Jonathan Ross filmed himself murdering Renee Good,
a married lesbian poet who was legally observing the ongoing ice crackdown in Minneapolis,
Ross muttered to himself two words.
Fucking bitch.
I haven't stopped thinking about those words since he spoke them,
and they immediately brought me back to a vastly different time.
and place in American culture, 2014, California,
where a 22-year-old man named Elliot Roger
was stewing in an online cesspool known as the in-cell ideology.
Elliot was struggling with relating to women
and finding a girlfriend and found community online
with other young male in cells who believed that
if they could not attract women, they should simply dominate them.
In one post, Elliot lambasted the quote,
oppressive feminist system.
And on May 23, 2014, Elliot Roger drove to a sorority house at nearby UC Santa Barbara and shot three women outside of it, killing two of them.
He then drove around the town of Ila Vista and killed a total of six people before turning the gun on himself.
And I'm not saying Jonathan Ross and other ICE agents are all wielding their guns explicitly to avenge the women who rejected them like Elliot Roger did.
But we do have reason to believe that the Trump administration is specifically seeking out men,
just like Elliot Roger to work for ICE,
or immigration and customs enforcement.
Men who are young, angry and aggrieved
about the status they feel they've been robbed of,
men who want to reclaim that status by any means necessary.
Today, I want to tell a story about how
immigration and customs enforcement is, among other things,
an outgrowth of masculinity in crisis.
We'll look too at what I believe is another deeply related
outgrowth of that crisis, which has looked
maxers like clavicular who promote eating disorders to young boys in a way that feels deeply
fascist. We'll get into that. I want to weave all of these late stage male crises together and
hopefully reach some semblance of a better way forward for all of us. I hope this isn't too lofty
of a premise, you guys. I mean, nope, I'm in. No, and I remember hearing this name clavicular.
He just did. He just went to jail too, right? Then he just get arrested for doing some similar shit.
He hasn't been arrested, although he has hit people with his car.
The masculine urge to hit a man with your car.
Yeah.
Gotta love it.
Gotta love it.
So to weave all of this together today, I am so excited to be joined by two new friends of the podcast.
The first is my friend, Politics and Pop Culture streamer on Twitch, Caroline Kwan.
Caroline, welcome to the show.
I can't believe this is our actual first episode because we did the Patreon before and we talk.
All the time.
I knew that I wanted to do this with Caroline.
And the first thing that I said to her when we started texting about doing this episode was like, I think we need a man.
Like a like a real man, you know, not me.
Yeah.
And I was texting.
A lot of times we're both texting each other the same thing at the same time.
And that was my thinking as well.
I was like, okay, we have Matt, we have me.
We need a straight man.
But one who gets it, who understands.
I don't like to say I get it. I don't like to own that too much just because it's a lot of pressure. And I will say something stupid at some point in time to make it seem like I don't get it. So I just want to always give myself room to fuck up. But I get enough to definitely have this conversation. I actually wrote my master thesis on Elliott Roger and like spreeshooters and sales and shit. So like this is perfect synergy for a lot of things. So if you haven't caught on, we are joined. I am so excited to be joined by F.
Signifier. He is a political and cultural video essayist on YouTube who people on the Patreon
were very excited about when I told them we were doing this episode together. So FD, welcome
to the show. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you for having me. Can I ask up front like I've sort of mapped
out what I'm basically doing here, which is relating these sort of formerly niche far right
misogynistic areas of the internet from the 2010s to this current wave of like government
sanctioned fascist violence in the form of ice.
Do you guys think that's too lofty of a premise?
Tell me how you feel.
I don't.
I think the desire for authoritarian figures is directly connected to like our perception and
yearning for this mythical masculinity that makes everyone feel safe and makes everything
seem like it's in this right place and there's order.
And of course, for the men, it becomes aspirational.
And then once we are like our fearless leader, then the women will treat us with respect and they'll follow what we say.
We won't have to develop personalities or we're deodorant and we'll still be able to get laid.
So there's a ton there.
There's a ton of masculine reclamation is where a lot of this energy comes from.
When he says, fucking bitch to the woman he just shot in the head, that's the act of masculine reclamation.
He felt emasculated in that interaction.
and he reclaimed it through violence.
And reclaiming your masculine status through violence is one of the first things you're taught as a little boy.
And it clearly doesn't go away.
And for a lot of men, it becomes something that ironically becomes a cage.
And so, yeah, I think you're, you know, I'm sure people can quibble with semantics or whatnot.
But no, I don't think this is too much of a reach at all.
I think it's very spot on.
It's all connected.
The through line here is about power and control.
It is about using groups like women.
immigrants, queer people as scapegoats. And you have this administration and all those in power
and their allies who use these groups as scapegoats in order to distract away from their horrific
economic policies, from how the system does not support these disenfranchised men in the same way
It doesn't support any of us except for those who the system is built for.
And I think seeing the way that the performance of masculinity, that rage, that hatred towards
women towards immigrants pops up all the time, whether we're talking about ice, whether we're
talking about these looks maxers, these male streamers, it's all related.
And I think these are young men who they're vulnerable, yes, but it's not as if they are in any
different material position than the rest of us. It's just the way that society has told them
this is how men are supposed to be. This is what you are owed. And this is who has taken it from you.
And this is how you get it back. I want to start by showing you to a video. This is filmed by a legal
observer who is recording themselves speaking to an ICE agent who's sitting in his car and threatening him.
I will tell you this, brother.
What?
You know?
I will tell you this.
Do you erase your voice?
I raise your voice.
If I raise my voice, you'll erase my voice.
Exactly, yeah.
Yeah.
Are you serious?
You said, if I raise my voice, you'll erase my voice?
That probably sounded a lot cooler in his head.
If you raise your voice, I'll erase your voice.
That feels like it's taken, like, straight off of, like, an in-cell forum.
It's John Wick.
John Wick is the ultimate, uh,
Sigma grind set figure.
Yeah, I saw that video.
It's so emblematic of what we're talking about.
That guy who is an ICE agent and is hiding behind, you know, this perceived power of the
federal government.
And after ICE has been executing Americans in the streets in broad daylight, having still
the audacity, still believing that he will be protected in threatening so openly like
And the guy was responding to him and going, okay, so you're telling me, if I raise my voice,
you're going to raise my voice. You're going to do violence to me for protesting. Like, that's just
to clarify. He's like, yeah. Yeah. Yeah. It's like that. I just did that. It's very like,
it's like chest puffed up, hyper macho. Yeah, what are you going to do about it? One thing I've always
observed about the core figures, like the core, I want to call them victims for the moment, just for the
moment of the red pill because they're usually the bottom rung. The bottom rung red pill figures
ironically are the biggest losers. They're like incredibly bad. And even to an extent,
they also are usually the most socially ineffective. There's a high prevalence of both self-diagnosed
and fully diagnosed neurodivergence, another behavioral health issue, so on and so forth.
And one thing that you'll find when engaging and studying them is a lot of what they're doing,
this guy is doing is imitating what they think the alpha males do under certain circumstances,
which is why it sounded so stilted and unnatural.
Like he didn't know if he had pulled the line.
Like he's like, he wanted to get another take at it.
He's like, that was the rehearsal.
Can we run it back?
Can we run it back?
Like, I really want to threaten you.
That sounded cooler.
Can I just get that back?
And so like, it's so much of that is in their behavior, in their movement.
You know, I don't know if we want to jump to Alex Pready just yet.
No, go for it, go for it.
But like, if you watch, if you, you know, dare to watch the full events, it's so clear that half of these men don't even love they've ever been in a fight before.
You know what I'm saying?
Let alone had like halfway decent law enforcement training.
And we know from looking at the information coming out about ICE that a lot of them don't.
A lot of them don't have a lot of training.
A lot of them don't have actual experience with law enforcement or military, etc.
or they're just getting guys that want to act out their, their fantasies.
Fantasy.
And we see the result of that.
I think, too, this kind of recognizing that they can't cut it in any of those other law enforcement
groups, you know, they're not signing up for the military.
It's like ICE is now their ticket to that.
Yeah.
The low standards.
And I just do want to throw out there.
You mentioned Elliot Roger.
He's not the only one, but numerous spree shooters in like the,
these types of guys actually do attempt to join the military and the armed forces as a form of
masculine reclamation because they may be a loser and these that and the third, you know,
in their previous life, but if they can make it to the military, they really, you really can't
take masculinity away from, you know, a soldier, so to speak, it's too traditional overall.
Mm-hmm. So let's take it back to Elliott Roger and in-cell culture more broadly in the early
2010s because I think that this is the formerly like niche far right, violently misogynistic culture
that ends up getting co-opted, that the sentiment behind it ends up getting co-opted by the MAGA movement
and by Donald Trump himself and sort of exploited to put these like disgruntled young men and
sometimes not so young men into these positions where they have guns and they're terrorizing the
streets as a form of what you say masculine reclamation.
So in-cells online really takes off in the early 2010s.
You can see in Google search results that the word in-cell, it skyrockets in popularity around 2010.
In-cell communities really take shape on places like Reddit and 4chan where you have a lot of just like young men and boys kind of just like complaining to one another about how they can't get laid.
And then it becomes this sort of pathology of, well, why can't we get laid?
well. We're genetically predisposed to never have a girlfriend because of the thinness of our wrists
or the slope of our foreheads. It becomes very race-sciencey very quickly. Some of the main pillars of
in-cell ideology, and these are courtesy of zero-tolerance UK, are that men are the real victims of
gender inequality, that women lie about their own oppression and use feminism as a means of
dominating men. Some might say cucking them. I hate when I use like, I hate when I use like
in cell words like unironically. Like it just makes me feel so lame. So gross. Imagine a master's
thesis. Were you just right cuck? Was the word cuck in your master's thesis? Yes it was. Yes,
it was. All kinds of horrible words right there. Stacey's and Chas and all the years. Stacey's and
Chad's and Beckies. Yeah, yeah, yeah. In order to prove this assertion that, like, men are the real
victims of gender inequality, insales will focus a lot on things like false rape allegations,
which we know are extraordinarily rare, but they will sort of use them to discredit all
allegations of gender violence. They believe that women are naturally evil, that women manipulate
men to get ahead. Well.
Caroline.
As the woman here.
They believe also, and I think this is important, that women are biologically hardwired to want to be sexualized and dominated by men, even if they don't know it.
And therefore, any male violence against women is justified because it's secretly.
It's what they really want.
It's what they really want.
Because 50 shades are great, which also was very hot as these things pop off.
I think it's also this convergence of all these different groups.
So in the early 2000s, you had pickup artists.
Yeah.
Pickup artists were so huge. You even had shows on like MTV and whatnot. You have men's rights activists. You have the black pillars, the red pillars. So these are all, they have their differences, but ultimately are rooted so deeply in misogyny and in this belief that men are entitled in this world and what they are entitled to is being denied to them. And that there is a long history here. And we talk about the crisis of masculinity. I'm like,
these men are always in crisis.
There's always some crisis of masculinity that's happening.
It just looks different depending on what era we're in.
And in the past, there's been a way for them to like address that.
Oh, we'll go to war.
We'll just chop off other men's heads.
Oh, we have the notions of now chivalry and kind of in the Enlightenment era.
And then that moving into kind of the Western ideals of men being breadwinners.
Now men, they go to work, they make money, they come home, they take care of the family,
they earn that bread. And as these men's, and I keep wanting to say, like, it is not just these men,
it is just the way that they are societally and culturally raised to believe that they are supposed to
have certain things. They are supposed to be a certain way as men. But as their material conditions
have deteriorated as these, you know, as capitalism and these other really oppressive systems have
disenfranchised them. There is this desperation. And that's what's,
been honed in on by a lot of these grifters, these reactionaries, these male, you know, male
supremacists. So it's something that's been happening for a while, but like in-cell culture,
it's just an evolution of these previous eras. Yeah, I would agree. I know one of the main
things you're probably going to get in comments or whatever is how this isn't actually in-cells.
This is insert thing here. That's part of the man is.
fear. And that's somewhat fair if you want to be overly, like, pedantic about which terms apply where.
But when you're naming, like, all the different groups she just named, they all still converge at
misogyny, patriarchy, and this worship of this mythical masculinity that somehow existed
in the past, but doesn't exist now. But when you go to the past, it also didn't exist then,
but it existed in the past before then. There's this great, something I got off Twitter. I can't
remember vividly, but where this guy like literally just went through the history of new, like a bunch of newspapers for like a hundred years back. And the headline kept repeating, are men okay? What happened to real men? And it's like 19, 12. And they're still asking that question. This is what I mean by this crisis of masculinity that we, you know, we talk about a lot now. And obviously it is pertinent and relevant. But it has been going on for a long time. Because what it really is is dominance frameworks and who gets to participate.
and who doesn't. I think to modulate what Caroline just said, it is the material, like,
material conditions have made it so there's more outgroup men, right? But the reality is that
incels didn't collect together back then because they could just beat women. And it was okay.
They could just beat their wives and their children. And it was just fine. There were,
there were so little protections for women. And women had to deal with it because they couldn't go to
college and get jobs. Their material conditions have deteriorated at the same time. And this is what makes
Encel Manist for ideology click for some of them is that they look in the past and they see, well,
all these men had good jobs. And now all these women have good jobs. So something must have happened.
And they don't recognize the fact that women weren't allowed to compete with men, right? And those women
still had to live. So they had to marry a man who maybe had no personality. I just saw something
And I'll stop.
Please don't.
A TikTok.
He was like, you look at the notebook, right?
Like, that was a real thing.
A woman's dilemma in a movie like the notebook was emblematic of the fact that there's this guy I love.
And then there's this guy with money.
And I love this guy, but I will be poor and I have responsibilities and family, et cetera, et cetera.
And I don't have the option of going to college myself in a career for myself to say that I can choose love.
And so for the average men, seeking out wealth and status or just stability was an easy way to attract the mate.
You didn't have to read.
You didn't have to shower.
You didn't have to be a nice guy.
You were a provider.
And now the numbers for education and employment have shifted so that those guys still feel like they should just be able to have, you know, girlfriends without deodorant.
And they can't.
And instead of engaging with the evolution of what the.
desirability looks like in a modern era, they just complain.
Are you all old enough to remember who stole my cheese?
That old book is like, I don't know, anybody else's mom in corporate America that just had
that book lying around.
No.
Who stole my?
Hold on a sec.
I'm looking at this up right now.
Wait, who moved my cheese?
Who moved my cheese?
Who moves my cheese?
Okay.
Okay.
Oh, apparently this is a big book.
It's a huge book in like the business.
this world in the 90s.
My mom worked for like high up in college and education.
And this was like a book she was given by her HR.
And it was everywhere for a second.
I don't know if I want this.
I feel like it's too much a tangent.
No, no, this is great.
Keep going.
The point of it is that instead of following the directions of that book, which is pivot,
develop, evolve from where you are.
The lesson of the story is the rats that got their cheese move just stayed in the same
spot and complained that they want their cheese back. And the other rant went and figured out
where they want to go to get the cheese. So the men in this situation are the rats.
Yes. Where are the bad rats? They're the rats that stayed still. I'm sorry. I'm sorry.
I just want to say something. I read that pickup artist book. Unironically, when it first came out.
But I was kind of over it by the time the show happened. But like I went through a bad
break up in 2007, 2006. And just like a lot of men, I was like, I don't understand what happened.
And I'm just so angry. And I don't know how to get women in this age and da-da-da-da. And I read that
book. And it, yeah, like, it kind of immediately was like, all right, not really. But I said
to say, I understand and empathize with the psychology of feeling like an out-group male
and wanting to figure out how to fix that.
The problem is all those other things Caroline was just speaking to
in this pervasive culture of dominance
that has been normalized among men
where some men read that and was like,
this sounds weird and gross.
And then some men reading it's like,
oh, I just need to be really disrespectful
and start nagging and that'll work.
Yeah, and I just wanted to add to,
I think, the element of these men being told
that now there's this version of
masculinity that has to do with how much sex you're having, with how many women you're having
sex with. And that is kind of why they emphasize to like high value women, low value women.
This is how to get. And Matt, I'm sure you have this in your outline too. Well, yeah, I would really,
I would really love, and I've never said this in my life, I would really love to talk about sexual
marketplace value. Let's go. SMV, baby.
In the in-cell worldview or the red pill worldview or whatever you want to call it, because
of course a lot of these ideas, especially as they relate to misogyny, have gained traction
in more mainstream areas of society that we're going to talk about that don't necessarily
identify with like involuntary celibacy or anything like that. This is all transcended way beyond
how much sex you do or don't have. But so the SMV, the sexual market value of someone, is
essentially, I mean, it's basically like when you see someone and you're like, rank them one through
10. And normally we think about that through the lens of looks, but sexual market value,
according to this red pill theory, it's a combination of your looks, your genetics, your social
status, your money, your bank account. And the idea that in cells put forth through charts and
math and algorithms is this idea that all women want like a nine or a ten male. And so anyone,
any male who is a one through eight is destined to be without love or romance or sex. And all
women are sort of like hypergamous. That's what they call hypergamous and that they date up. But men will
date, you know, anyone. And it's just, because we're so virtuous. It's that they can have higher
standards now because of social progress, that women's standards that they weren't allowed to have
before because they couldn't even have a credit card, right? Like at one point, they couldn't even
go outside without a man being with them. Right. So now the issue is women having too high of
standards, women having choice, women being able to provide for themselves, and this is the problem.
Right. And the irony is that it's the opposite now. The irony is that there's so much.
research now showing that women are not attracted to six foot five, seven percent body fat guy.
It's so funny because it's like women will say these things and these men are like, no,
no, no, that's not true. They're all liars. They just want the zero percent body fat.
The thing that really gets me about this is that people who subscribe hard to this theory,
people like clavicular, the king of the looks maxers who we're going to talk about shortly,
they think that like obsessing over your body and your wealth and your image and your brand are things that will attract women.
But it's like nobody wants a romantic partner that thinks that much about themselves.
Yeah.
And the women that you will attract with that type of behavior are not the type of women you're going to want to be in relationships with.
Also, so much of this is performance for other men.
Yes. I would say all of it is.
Yes.
When you see them at the club together, there was that moment.
too when I think clavicular, one of them asked Nick Flentis, like, you want to spring girls over?
And they were like, oh, no.
And it's, that's the performance aspect.
And then when I see clips of them talking to women and it's so, they're so awkward, they're so
uncomfortable because they put so much, they put everything into, this is how you look.
This is how you perform.
This is peak masculinity.
This is how you get your sexual market value up.
This is how you own these women.
You know, you get whatever you want.
And then here's an example of them talking to a woman, and they can't.
So ultimately, I think inceldom was about young men and boys blaming women for their loneliness, their insecurities.
And it was also a coping mechanism for an eroding understanding of what it means to be a man,
which distilled masculinity into math and numbers and skull measurements.
It's a very antisocial worldview.
And a response to male loneliness destined to make the men who bought into it feel lonelier.
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to the show.
I'm struck now by how commonplace a lot of these pillars of in-cell ideology now are in the
mainstream.
And I think you see through the first half of the 2020s men's gendered insecurity exploited
en masse by people like Andrew Tate, Aidan Ross, Sneco, the list goes on and on and on and on.
But what's really interesting to me is this also sort of like went beyond just like these
like niche far right corners of like rumble and kick and whatever.
I want to show you guys a video of Scott Galloway,
everyone's favorite like center liberal podcaster academic,
who's essentially just espousing the sexual marketplace value theory.
Yeah, I got in trouble for using a clip of this in one of my videos.
Am I going to get hate for dunking on Scott Galloway?
I mean, are you not going to get hate for anything?
All right.
Women mate horizontally or socioeconomically horizontally and up, men horizontally and down.
And when the pool of viable males horizontal and up keep shrinking, there's a lack of mating
opportunities. Because men are much less choosy. We want to spread our seed to the four corners
of the earth and women want to put up a much finer screen to pick the smartest, fastest,
and strongest seed. I always wanted romantic and sexual partners. I just wanted that as a man.
And I immediately connected the dots that in a capitalist society, your selection set of mates is broadened if you are economically viable.
So let me try.
The biggest problem here is because I talked to a guy who's into this, is somebody you should look into for this.
Mack and Murphy.
Okay.
And he is a bio such and such researcher.
And a lot of his stuff is Scott Galloway Corps.
Now, he's a little more overt in implying the wrong.
long-headedness of in cells and stuff like that. But he does take the care to give grace to the
fact that the whole sexual marketplace idea is not like absolutely false. It's just a complete
incorrect framing of the issue. Does that make sense? Keep going. We're talking about
desirability. We're talking about what makes somebody attractive. And instead of being like a person
might crave stability, a person might crave a partner who has certain features, a person
might be sexually attracted to an individual, they'll say, well, if you want to mate, give woman
money.
And it becomes its weird degrading of the nature of attraction and what people choose partners
on.
And it does relegate women to, you know, Pokemon, essentially, within the game of like men
trying to collect, you know, female partners, usually for the.
respected admiration of other men.
So when I hear him say sexual marketplace and mating, it's like,
all right, look, can you try to be more normal and maybe you won't gain a specific type of
follow?
You know?
Yeah.
And I think what you're talking about, too, is the issue with kind of the commodification
of love.
It's not a great film, but materialist kind of takes a stab at this of like how people measure
up on paper type of thing.
What's frustrating is, first of all, you know, the physical atroids.
attraction element is something that that's real, that exists.
But it's this lack of understanding that being a man who is comfortable in their masculinity without any of this performance.
You know, somebody who is rooted in the values of empathy, that, like, it's so wild that women will say these things.
they'll say, sure, maybe I have my, you know, who I'm physically attracted to.
But as far as all this other stuff, you know, oh, these impossibly high standards.
And you have women going, yeah, we just would love, you know, men who are kind, who are caring, who are empathetic, who are not what these other men are making money off of telling other men how they should act.
Or even just like, like normal, a bit normal.
be normal. A bit normal. I'm going to rename this podcast. A bit normal.
Let's engage with a thing that often doesn't come up around these conversations, which is progressive and liberal women with right-wing men. They're still not with the Andrew Tates. They're still not with the, you know, the alpha chud guys. Like there are a lot of, and this is just a thing that we know from, sadly, some women have revealed it thinking it was funny and other things were like, oh, is you're, you're,
dating a Maga person. That's interesting. But like even when you see the Maga guy, he's still
like five foot nine and kind of doughy. You know what I'm saying? And he sells insurance. He's not
like a international banker who's six foot five and like hunts people on the weekend.
Yeah. Yeah. So the consistent thing, because the politics and the behaviors and the traits
can vary widely, right? But the consistent.
thing the women are showing is that looks and money are not as defining as we tend to imply. It's a lot of
vibes. It's a lot of energy. And it's a lot of intangibles that you can't control. And if you're
hammering your face with a rock or whatever the looksmaxers do, isn't that a thing they do?
Bone breaking or something like that? Yeah, that is allegedly one of the more extreme tactics of the
looks maxers. Should we talk about looks maxers? I am so.
interested because this is one thing I haven't delved a lot in. So sure. Welcome to the world of
clavicular. One of the newer trends among young men online is looks maxing. Looks maxing. Caroline, do you want to
take this? Yeah, looks maxing. It's indicative of this age of techno vanity where you can you can plump,
you can inject, you can chisel, you can break.
You can essentially, if you have the money to do it,
you can change everything about how you look to fit this golden ideal.
So, you know, carving up your face, injecting yourself with meth to maintain the body fat
percentage.
Like there are all these now, it's taken self-improvement to a very, very extreme place.
and it is essentially this obsession with not being ugly.
And here's the way that you achieve that ideal perfection.
And so that is what clavicular, I mean, there was a clip of him injecting a girl with,
it was like Botox or filler on stream.
It feels illegal.
He is not licensed to do that, mind you.
But yes, like injecting himself, injecting other people.
Yeah.
So essentially an involving movement from something like,
self-improvement and kind of, you know, taking, just generally taking care yourself to the most
hyper-extreme place. Well, you know what this is. This is gender affirming care for him.
No, yeah. I mean, it's gender affirming care for young straight men. The face of this we've alluded to
is this man who, if you're not familiar, he goes by the nickname clavicular online. He's a 20-year-old,
young straight white dude who has become an influencer sort of in the ranks with the Tates,
with Nick Fuentes, with
Sneco, they were all just together at a club in Miami
where they were singing How Hitler.
Okay, I didn't know.
How Hitler by Kanye West
and then the Miami Club released a statement
that's like, we're so sorry, we don't know what happened.
I'm like, what?
Likely thing to happen in Miami.
But it's so interesting to me
because there's been all this sort of like hand-wringing
about like the mystery of looks maxing and stuff.
And it's so, like this is an eating disorder
for young straight men.
Yeah.
That's what it amounts to.
Guy bulimia.
You know what other group has long struggled with, like,
disordered eating and body image?
Besides women, obviously, is like gay men.
Like, and this looks maxing stuff.
The goal of it is to impress the other men around you
and to, you know, attract women.
And I know anyone who, any disgruntled young straight guy might be like,
oh, what do you know about masculinity or a fucking faggot, whatever.
True, true.
But if I can tell you one thing that I've learned from dealing with, like,
disordered eating and body image for the last 10 years since I was in high school,
is that it doesn't, like, it will never benefit your relationships.
It won't benefit your sense of self.
It's, it's been harmful for my relationships, to be very honest, you know,
because you're,
it's ultimately just time spent fixating on yourself and developing like a sickness.
And I feel badly when I see this stuff because I actually kind of like identify with these young men struggling with body image issues.
And I just wish I could tell them like this isn't actually how you achieve happiness.
In fact, it's quite the opposite.
Yeah.
And the saddest thing is that I don't know what other way to say this.
It's less effective for them than it might be for you.
Like they're not like the body image things within like gay communities.
Because gay men are more vapid than straight women.
No, I mean.
I'm just saying that gay men are, my understanding is that gay men still very much behave like men in terms of like their expectations on partnerships and, and the primacy of looks.
The best way I could put it to get into is like gym bro culture, which is gym cells as a thing.
So like guys will hit the gym.
I just saw a picture of this, this clavicular guy who clearly has 5% 10% body fat.
And just a lot of women like, you know, if you go to a club, a girl that's like half drunk and feeling on your chest, that might get you.
late that night. It will not get that girl to stay with you six months from now when you are,
you know, when you haven't been to the gym in a month and you're going through a natural
move swing that man go through, et cetera. It's not something that relationships are built on. And I think
the culture amongst, generally speaking, straight women is that they really don't care about the
body image stuff nearly as much as these men point out. So it's actually just the irony that that's
only for other men and will not get them.
meaningful relationships. Maybe. Meaningful relationships know.
This is kind of an overall issue with the aesthetics of perfection, the kind of looking like an
actual filter these days. It first of all requires thousands and thousands and thousands of dollars,
which a lot of these followers of clavicular, whoever else is preaching this, they don't have.
And it's also like you have to constantly be doing these things to yourself, injecting yourself
with these drugs. It's really, really unhealthy and just not sustainable. You know, all of this is sad because it's
just a new thing that's being promised as a way to like instantly change someone's life. Like, hey,
young dude who is feeling as if they have no purpose in this world, as if they can't get girls,
is it blah, blah, blah, blah, blah. And everyone's telling them these different things. This kind of content promises
them success and fulfillment and also like immediately.
not a, oh, this is something that, you know, it takes, it takes a long time to work on yourself,
you know, to look inward, et cetera, et cetera.
When these things don't materialize, that's how these men can become even further radicalized.
So I've unfortunately spent too much time looking at these kind of Reddit internet,
misogynistic in-cell radical, you know, very right-wing radicalized spaces.
And this is what happens is like how these men get set on these patterns.
towards really, really dangerous extremism is because these things that they are being promised
when it doesn't materialize, that sets them into like what's, you know, what's the next thing?
What's something that's even more dangerous, more extreme?
It's how do we get to then this place where men are then committing horrible acts of violence,
whether they are violent towards women, whether they are violent towards queer people,
towards immigrants. And it's that belief that to be a man means to be violent in this way. That's how you
take power and control. One interesting thing that I wanted to kind of amplify that Caroline touched
on is the aspect of community, like these Reddit pages and following those different streamers.
The thing that people don't imagine, because a lot of this is, a lot of this stuff is fundamentally
white supremacist frameworks, even the concepts.
Concepts of beauty are built out of westernized white supremacists, concepts of who has virtue as a human and who does not.
And thus, you know, the closer to whiteness you are, the more virtue, yada, yada.
Like, there's a lot of that going on.
But despite all of that, despite the fact we're talking about Nick Fuentes, he's the only white guy and that like that made that major crew.
And people don't realize just how diverse red pill in-cell spaces are.
One name that hasn't came up yet is Kevin Samuels, who was the king of the bull.
black mannisphere and people don't realize that the black
manosphere was actually here first
on the internet, on YouTube, etc.
That speaks to the misogyny of it all,
but the thing that keeps people
that makes them dive deeper into the extremism
and does eventually churn out
every once in a while a mass murderer
is the fact that
once you've got this stink on you,
it's hard to get it off and that you just
get sucked deeper. Once you start
speaking in Encel Red Pill
language, it's
You only learn how to talk that talk to like your other peers on your message board or your
Reddit or your group chat or whatever.
You can't talk to girls.
You know, you're going to call her a FOID or whatever the fuck the term is.
And she's going to be like, what does that mean?
I hate that I know what Floyd means.
And then to bring it back to the ice of it all is that that's also a community.
Those are now brothers.
You know what I'm saying?
And that brotherhood ends up being an extremely powerful connective tissue to keep people in that
position.
And if we want to touch on it all, like, okay, so what are the responses?
The irony is that what we're doing is really good for like, you know, spreading ideas and
communicating and like building different repertoires of debunking, et cetera.
But the biggest thing really is like managing small pockets of communities to pull one
or two out at a time. It's almost like decultifying people. You can't just tell them the truth.
They have to go through a process. The same process that sucked them in has to be undone to get them out.
Well, let's talk about ICE, which I imagine if you clicked on this podcast, you're wondering at
this point, well, how does this tie in? The Washington Post reported a few weeks ago that it obtained
internal ICE documents that showed ICE is spending $100 million over the next year for recruit
and who are they targeting?
Quote, people who have attended UFC fights,
listened to patriotic podcasts,
or shown in interest in guns and tactical gear.
They're also targeting ads to people
whose phone locations shows them near military bases,
NASCAR races, college campuses, and gun shows.
This is racial profiling.
Like, there's a reason that ICE is not investing this recruit.
in money to advertise near gay bars in hell's kitchen.
Well, I was going to say if it's patriotic podcast, then clearly it's listeners of this one.
Yeah.
Well, I mean, hey, you never know.
That's why I don't let Spotify do programmatic ads on this podcast because you might get
a fucking ice ad.
Yeah.
You know, but there's a reason that they are targeting these specific people that,
frankly, we've been describing throughout this episode so far.
They are targeting young men whose brains have been.
rotting online with misogyny slop for years and saying, you know, you think feminism has taken
male valor away from you? You think immigrants are taking your jobs and impeding on your place in the
sexual marketplace. And maybe immigrants are even endangering white women who you need to protect.
Right. We got to get the rapist and pedophiles off the street, but not out the White House.
Those ones are okay. Yes, exactly. The, oh, we need to protect white women. You know, they bring up
Blake and Riley all the time.
I do want to add that it's also the payment.
Right.
So like these are, again, outgroups, outgroup men, right, who probably don't have any other
major skills.
And I think they said it's a $50,000.
Signing bonus you get after you serve for like a year or some shit.
I was seeing some Reddit posts, though, of people who recently joined ICE and they're like,
has anyone been paid yet?
I've been working for four weeks and I haven't gotten a paycheck yet.
like this is kind of concerning.
Scammed by the Trump administration?
What?
Shocker.
But you're right.
And that's part of this too, is that this eroding sense of financial security.
I mean, this eroding middle class and finance is part of returning it back to the fucking
SMV, the sexual marketplace value.
Part of that is how much money you have.
ICE is offering a reclamation of masculinity.
I really like that term.
that you gave in a variety of ways.
And so I want to take a look at a few of the ads
that ICE has been pushing through the Department of Homeland Security social media accounts
because these are simply bananas.
I'm sure you've seen some of them.
Yeah, it's very boys club, very like daddy issues.
I'm going to send you guys a couple of these ads.
Could you describe what we're seeing in this first ad?
Want to deport illegals with your absolute boys?
And it's a van with four empty chairs, like just boys being boys, bros hanging out.
Think about how many criminal illegal aliens you could fit in this bad boy.
Yeah.
Who is this for?
It's for people who it's like have this like cartoon version of what they think men are supposed to be.
Yeah.
This is like the Scooby-Doo mystery van.
Yeah.
These, and this is a video idea I have.
I'm going to return to this.
These are motherfuckers that should have joined a band.
You know what I'm saying?
Like, rock music is gone.
Like, I genuinely believe that there was some type of concerted effort to remove white, like, rock music from mainstream to allow for the insertion of the alt-right and shit like that.
Okay.
Because I'm 43.
I know I'm older than everybody else, but how much older am I?
I'm 33.
I'm 27.
Take it away.
So, I understand.
Back in my day.
Things like, you know, MTV showed videos, but like literally it was hard to see black music on MTV for a long time because it was hair metal and then alternative and then grunge and then punk and then sky and then all these other things.
These were cultural entities for white men, for white boys, straight white boys that were unique unto themselves.
And they were also very anti-establishment.
They were progressive for the most part.
You know what I'm saying?
Rage Against the Machines.
Video was about killing the name of and breaking down geopolitics and immigration.
And so like that collective identity, you couldn't go from that to ice.
You couldn't.
But not long after Bush 2, you see the disappearance of all these garage bands and the punks and all these white subcultures that were uniquely white male oriented.
and you see them replaced with the UFC.
With, like, country.
And country.
And hip hop, to be real, like hip hop has, is very red-pilled, red pill friendly, I'll say, in a lot of ways.
And so when I look at this van, I'm thinking like an awesome rock band with a heavy metal band in it with like flames on the side and Jack Black.
But they're replacing it with ice.
And that's so dark.
I also look at this fan.
And I'm like, oh, it's the perfect van to kidnap children.
You know, when you visualize the like rapist kidnapping children van, they're like, here
you go.
Yeah, that's literally this van.
You're so right, though.
I mean, so much of this.
And these ads really tap into it is understanding young white men's longing for community,
which is real.
And something everyone should be pining after.
Like, we should all want community.
Community is a great thing.
when your community is oriented around kidnapping people from their homes and their workplaces,
that's a problem.
Let's look at ad number two.
We're taking, wow, we're taking father, son bonding to a new level.
This has to be AI generated.
No age cap joint ice now.
It's a white guy and his dad was balding with sunglasses on.
His dad looks like the Facebook, the mean.
when it's like, hey, liberals.
Listen up, liberals, my wife left me.
What my wife left me mean.
It's also giving like if you have daddy issues, right?
Here's, this is your daddy now.
So not even literally just like, oh, a father's son bonding activity.
But a, hey, this is where, you know, this is where you can find your father, the father who stepped up.
Think about how many people look at Trump as their dad.
Yeah.
These magistrate figures as their dad.
Like Andrew Tate was a lot of people's dads.
Kevin Samuels was a whole lot of dudes' dads.
The thing that people don't understand about men in crisis in a variety of ways is that it's a very cyclical thing around emotional intelligence in a lack thereof.
Not even emotional intelligence.
It's more like emotional deprivation.
The thing I always point out is that at age three, 90% of the boys in this country will have to,
to start shedding their emotional valence.
Like you'll be told to stop crying because you're a boy.
And that's it.
There's no like contextualization.
There's no explanation.
There's no comfort.
You are a boy.
And now you're three.
So that crying shit is over.
And that spills into so many other things around touch deprivation.
And like when I was a teacher, the thing I realized immediately.
when I started connected with my male students,
one of the main things they wanted was just fucking hugs.
And I taught in the boondocks with white kids.
I taught in the hood.
I taught in junior colleges.
I connected with athletes and the gamut.
And, you know, kids with fathers, kids without fatherless, whatever.
And so many of them, more than anything,
they just wanted male affection, platonic male affection,
especially from an older male.
Yeah.
Because, you know, older men are taught that our job is to, is to essentially brutalize these young boys so they have to be ready for the real world.
And in reality, we're crippling them, you know?
So, like, that daddy thing is definitely, definitely a thing.
Reclaim your relationship with your father through becoming ICE agents.
I mean, that's really what it's telling you.
And it's just such a shame because it's like, you don't need to join ICE.
to mend the relationship with your father, just like, just like talk.
I don't know, like, like, hug each other, like, like, like, like, kiss on the cheek,
like, whatever.
I don't know.
Yeah, it's wild.
Or if you're, you know, Tom Brady on the mouth.
Or if you're Tom Brady on the mouth.
Honestly, I hate Tom Brady, but when people freaked out about him kissing his, like, small
child on the mouth.
At least it's affection, you know.
I don't care.
I was like, this is beautiful.
Like, I was literally a defender of specifically.
Tom Brady's relationship with his son from day one, not Tom Brady in basically any other
context. God bless. Yeah. I've had to start respecting him as a football fan after seeing what
happened to Bill Belichick when he left. I was like, okay, I got to give you more props because this
dude's, this dude lost a divorce. I'm going to laugh and pretend to understand some of the
football referencing that's happening. Sorry. I want to look at ad number three here. Could one of
describe this one.
America needs you.
Join ICE now.
Which way American man?
Joinice.gov.
Which way American man?
I do appreciate this one person who said, we want the Epstein files.
The commenters on DHSGov, Instagram, keeping it real.
But yeah, it's captioned which way American man.
And there is this man dressed in like this patriotic costume.
And he's standing next to this sign pole that.
has all of these different options facing different directions like cultural decline, homeland,
service, invasion, opportunity, which way Western man is a reference to an anti-Semitic book and
meme. But, you know, a lot of what you see with DHS advertising is about like, you have a purpose.
Defend the homeland, which is like a very explicit Nazi messaging.
Yeah, the cultural decline is very, very white supremacist dog whistle coded.
And the irony is how many Latinos or Mexican men are joining ICE.
Both of the men that killed Alex Pready were of Latino descent from my understanding.
They were.
Yeah, what do you make of that?
I'm going to try not to make much of it.
I'll just say that shout out to deculturation, one of the homies that very radical,
going there understanding you're about to get the realist leftist shit you're going to get.
But he's also Mexican-American.
He talks about second generation and first generation.
immigrants, the phrase I've heard is that nobody hates an illegal immigrant more than a first
generation that just got their, you know, papers or whatever. You add in all those other things,
all those other factors of economics, all those factors of affirming, because we're talking about
affirming masculinity a lot, a lot, but we're also, again, this is very much a white supremacist
framework. We're getting closer to whiteness through this action. We get to be one of the good ones.
This is very pick me adjacent.
Proximity to white power.
And it happens in pretty much every minority group, every specialized whatever group,
has the picmies that are trying to approximate closeness to whiteness to white masculinity to white straight masculinity by selling out, insert whatever group they're attached to.
Exactly what you just said is that there's a version of this in every community.
And I find just like, as a gay guy, that like some of the most.
vicious homophobia I've experienced online is from right-wing gay men. And I find that minorities
who identify with white supremacy and conservatism and fascist movements, they can sometimes be
the most bigoted and the most violent, I think, because they feel even more than like the white
fascists that they have something to prove. Yeah, they have to work overtime. I don't know if you guys
saw this, but one of the clips that just keeps running through my mind is this ICE agent,
racially profiled a Latino guy.
And he went to, you know, do what they do,
beat the shit out of him, arrest, you know, kidnap him.
And the guy was like, what do you do?
What are you doing, bro?
Are you doing this to me because I have an accent?
So do you.
It was so like, my God, yes, that's, it's the absurdity of that
where he's like, you are profiling me because I have an accent.
You have the same accent, motherfucker.
And the ICE agent was like, yeah, but I'm,
Like that was, you could see him in that moment where he's like, yeah, but I'm one of the good guy.
Like, I'm on the team and you're not.
It's very internalized.
And, you know, part of me wants to lose just to watch Nick Fuentes become Mexican again.
Part of me wants all of us to lose.
If we all lose and it all goes over, we're all in camps.
I just want to have a clip of when Nick Fuentes has to come into the camp with us.
It's so dark.
They're like, sorry, you might be a Nazi, but you are Mexican, so.
And closeted from my understanding.
Or something approximate to that.
The cat boy thing is definitely a thing.
Yeah, that's a speculation around Nick Fuentes' sexuality is something that every time I even
crops up in the corner of my screen, I just kind of like avert my eyes because I'm like,
I honestly don't have time for this right now.
There's another notable ICE recruiting advertisement that's a,
It's an image of just like the Wild West and like the silhouette of a man on a horse.
And it says, we'll have our home again.
Join.e.com.
We'll have our home again is the title of a white nationalist anthem by a band called the Pine Tree Riots.
The lyrics from that song are, in our towns, we're foreigners now.
Our names are spat and cursed.
The headline smack of another attack.
Not the last and not the worst.
Oh, my fathers, they look down on me.
I wonder what they feel to see their noble.
sons driven down beneath a cowards heel, oh by God, we will have our home again.
So I think it's interesting. This song has some popularity among like white nationalists on
YouTube. It just goes all the way back around to me to all of that in-cell culture stuff,
all of the sort of far right niche internet stuff we were talking about. Because while most people,
I think might look at something like this and think that's sort of bizarre and culty, they won't
get necessarily the dog whistles. But the people spending time in those corners of the internet
who are also interestingly the very people DHS is targeting these advertisements to, they will get
it. Also, so much of the language that we hear the right use of returning to, you know, the golden
era, returning to a more traditional way of life. Things have gotten so out of control. This is
why, you know, our society and our economy and everything is just destabilized because there's
too much, you know, there's woke, there's progress. And it's a lot of this kind of aesthetics and
visuals and language of eras like the American frontier, the Wild West. Even the previous ice
ad, the America needs you join ice now. That is also taking from the I Want You for the U.S.
Army, you know, with Uncle Sam, the iconic recruitment poster. And that was used to recruit for World
War I and also in World War II. But now in the way that it's being a
applied and with the additional, you know, white nationalist, white supremacist, straight up dog whistles.
It is incredibly racist.
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So FD had to take a little break from the podcast because he has children to tend to.
Some of us have responsibilities. Wouldn't know a thing about it. So it's just
I for this segment. And I want to talk about something that has been cropping up a lot over the last
few weeks in regards to the ICE protester discourse that I have found particularly bizarre, but maybe
not surprising. And we really saw this gain traction after the killing of Renee Good, which is
this acronym, Offles. Have you seen the awful acronym? Yeah, it's so stupid.
Stans for, in right-wing media at the moment,
affluent white female urban liberal.
And so much of their disdain for protesters
has become laser-focused on this idea
of the affluent urban white woman
who's out in the street protesting ice.
Yeah.
So there is the term wine mom
that's something that's been around for a while now.
And it refers to the white, well-to-do,
suburban contemporary mother who has her
shard, you know, her glass of chardonnay or her bottle of chardonnay at night
to deal with how shitty life is.
There's the wine mom term, but now there is this freaking acronym that essentially
is because Trump and conservative allies are blaming these wine moms,
these liberal white women.
Like, think I've just had it.
Yeah, Jennifer Welch.
Jennifer Welch.
Yeah, Jennifer in Pumps, that kind of archetype of woman who is being blamed for the violence that's happening.
It's nothing new to blame mothers.
Yeah, let's look at what Greg Gutfeld had to say about offals on Fox News the other night.
Now you see women larping as saviors who feel less sympathy for their relatives than strangers, many of whom are criminals.
Normally, there's a hard stop.
It's kids.
If you haven't at home, you don't normally decide to charge a line of federal agents.
When that line disappears, it's a clue that the brainwashing is complete.
The affluent white female liberal isn't just awful.
She's aimless because the left's phony empowerment marginalized their real power.
Their self-relevance was stripped away and replaced by a savior complex.
As government expanded, its role as provider, they're shrunk.
So what now?
Well, women need guidance.
men got it already with the rise of the internet dad.
Jordan Peterson, Elon Musk, Scott Adams, Mike Roe, Joe Rogan, Adam Carolla, Tyrus, Tom Shaloo.
Guys who told young men to build, work, fix, and take responsibility, to focus on service and not ego.
Maybe it's time for the internet mom, a woman who shows other women the way out of this spiritual dead end.
screaming at cops, invading churches, blocking traffic.
That's not empowerment.
That's exploitation.
So internet moms, your time has come and the country needs you.
So join us because like pregnancy, men can't do it alone.
Wow, what a banger last line.
I mean, look, this is a tale as oldest time blaming mothers,
separating the good mothers from the bad mothers.
You know, that's his call to action where he's like,
good mothers, you know, we need you out there.
We need you to curtail the activities, violent activities of these bad mothers.
It's very interesting because all of these people who are like, oh, these liberal white women just like flouncing around in the streets protesting ice, they all speak as if it's like, it's like a misuse of the white women's privilege to be doing that.
Like how privileged you must be to be protesting for the rights of people beneath you.
And I think that's actually what it's about, because we know white women are not the only women in the streets protesting.
But I think the idea that a financially stable white woman or mother would be spending her time fighting for the rights of what this fascist administration has determined are undesirables, that is like a unique betrayal of what she should be doing as a white woman in a fascist regime.
Well, it's also because of all the different women demographics, white women, the majority of them, do support Trump and other Republicans.
Like, they are a very consistent Republican voting group. They have been for a long time. And so when then there is this show of force from white women who are not supporting Republicans, who are these offals out there in the streets protesting, getting involved.
It's also a, what the fuck are you guys doing?
Like, that's not, this is not how white women are supposed to be.
You are violating the white womanhood here by not aligning yourselves with this conservative party.
Right.
And we see that in the way that these ICE agents flaunt Renee Good's murder after the fact.
Yeah.
Renee Good was a lesbian and she had a butch partner who was standing with her while she was murdered.
And her partner was saying to Jonathan Ross right before he murdered Renee Good,
oh, like, what are you going to do, big boy?
Like she was taunting him, which you're allowed to do, by the way,
and she was threatening his masculinity.
And I think the two of them, just by virtue of being lesbians,
like this was a homophobic hate crime as much as it was all sorts of other things.
Yeah, 1,000 percent.
Yes, 1,000%.
I think that's kind of been lost in it.
This was absolutely misogynistic, homophobic hatred.
You can see it on him when Renee Good's wife was challenging him, when she's like, hey, I'm not
mad at you, dude.
And then he fucking kills her and calls her a fucking bitch afterwards.
I think a lot of women, I think a lot of queer people have had a personal experience
like that.
I think they in that moment probably had a flashback to the many times they have experienced.
in something like that.
Here, you know, how dare you challenge this straight white man,
whatever happens to you is of your own doing?
That's the way it was framed.
It wasn't necessarily that Jonathan Ross was innocent of having killed her.
Of course, that element was there, too.
It was more so the emphasis on Renee Good deserved to be killed.
Yep.
And ice observers testified after her death that ICE agents across the country berated them.
One said that she was told, quote, have you not learned?
That's why we killed that lesbian bitch.
And another woman said, I was in the vehicle with three ICE agents.
And as soon as they all got into the vehicle and shut the doors, they just immediately started taunting me, making fun of me.
One of them took a photo of me and showed it to the other agents.
And, you know, they were just laughing, you know, insinuated that I was ugly.
And then one of the agents, the one who had sprayed the pepper spray into my car proceeded to say,
you guys got to stop obstructing us.
That's why that lesbian bitch is dead referring to Renee Good.
To me, it was so, it was so clear that hatred and the way that, of course, then she was
smeared afterwards as a way to justify what happened to her.
And I think too about Alex Pready that like his last act was to assist a woman who ICE had brutalized.
It's like here are these men.
We just spent the last hour and a half talking about how, you know, they're recruiting from men who believe that they need to protect the homeland,
that they need to protect these vulnerable white women in our country from being raped and killed.
And yet the way that they had shoved that woman down and Alex who actually was demonstrating like genuine care towards her to protect her,
to see if she was okay.
And those were his last words.
He said, are you okay?
Because that was, you know,
Renee Good being a lesbian with a partner
who was standing up to Jonathan Ross.
Like, that was traitorous
to what white women are supposed to be
in the eyes of these people.
And Alex Pretti defending a woman
was traitors to what he's supposed to be doing
as a white man, you know?
And this just brings it back to my thesis
that I made at the beginning,
which I don't think is far-fetched,
which is that I think in many ways,
ways like Elliot Rogers would have made a great ice agent in that he was filled with
vitriolic hatred for women who he thinks are actively undermining what he is owed as a man.
And here you have this man, Jonathan Ross, who is murdering Renee Good for her and her partner's
sort of imposition on his masculinity.
Like, I really do think that is what's happening here.
And I think that is ultimately what ICE is.
I think this is about men, like FD said, reclaiming their masculinity,
which is also what Elliot Rogers was doing in 2014 in Ila Vista.
Yeah, the masculine urge to just kill a woman.
That's fucking bleak.
So dark.
And FD is back with us.
Before we conclude the episode, I want to talk about solutions for men,
which is not something that I invest myself in too often,
but, you know, we all have to get out of this together.
It really is reaching a fever pitch,
and this is like a level of cruelty we're seeing enacted across the country
that just can't fucking continue.
And I think, you know, yes, abolish ICE, yes, abolish all of this.
But we also need, I think, from a really deep and, like,
psychological framework need to understand how to not reach this place
where people would want to even join something.
like this, you know, and maybe that's a lofty ideal. But I think we understand people who really
look at this stuff closely that, like, fighting immigrant quote unquote crime, which ultimately just
amounts to like, you know, finding undocumented immigrants who work at Home Depot and kidnapping them
from their job. Like, it's a cartoon issue. And if you're a man seeing these DHS ads, it's not going
to give you purpose. It's not. You know, so much of this centers around, like we said before,
the supposed danger that undocumented immigrants pose to white women. The Republicans constantly bring up
Lake and Riley, Irina Zarutka. They always bring up those crimes as some sort of gotcha when we talk
about like Alex Pready and Renee Good. They're like, oh, where were you when Lake and Riley was killed?
Well, the person who killed Lake and Riley is in prison. You know, there's no justice for being
murdered, but as far as you can go in the justice system, these people got justice. The difference is
people like Alex Pready, Renee Good, they were murdered by the state. They have no justice. In fact,
the state is trying actively to not even investigate their murders. But also, we know that
undocumented immigrants aren't the real people posing threatening violence against white women. It's
their partners, statistically. It's their pastors. It's straight white men. It's other straight white men.
Police and ICE agents and ex-military have a higher propensity to beat and kill their wives.
Mm-hmm. So what is your messaging
to young men right now who feel like what was once a sort of niche, highly misogynistic,
extremely, like, bizarre and intense yearning for, like, reclaiming masculinity.
That is now, like, the whole culture, especially pushed from the government.
Like, what are you, what's your messaging to them?
I don't have a lot that I'm as confident in these days because what I've started to actually
focus on more are the children.
Think of the children, actually.
I do think community.
Community is a big thing.
Seek out self-development apart from these overly traditionalized masculine frameworks
and find communities outside of spaces that are going to reinforce and lead you back to these spots.
And you'd be surprised at how much everything gets better once you're in community
and connecting with people and how little feminists in girls that,
blue hair piss you off all of a sudden when you have like decent friends that aren't also
foaming at the mouth misogynist. But what I do actually think, at least a lot of us,
should focus on is what essentially amounts to the liberation of children. One thing we didn't
touch on that I'm going to just drop and then leave so that you guys can't have to deal with
the mess of it all is that we often forget that patriarchy is a non-gendered framework.
If patriarchy is police most heavily and most beneficial to men, but like many men, myself
included, will tell you that the biggest patriarchs in their world were usually women.
And even if just like other young girls when they were growing up, you know, policing
and affirming certain masculine norms.
And I bring that up with the children's liberation thing is that we really do have to
reframe how we raise little boys.
and as a byproduct of that, also little girls.
There's a lot of effort being put in to reframe girlhood,
all for the benefit, all good things.
These are all good things that are happening.
And not nearly as much as being done to reframe boyhood.
And what we're doing is priming these boys to be very amenable to Andrew Tate or a clavicular
once they hit puberty.
And, you know, I remember there was a video.
a year or two ago of
Sneko running into a bunch of like 11 year olds
that were fans of his
and they're just shouting slurs
and degrading women and trans women
and they don't even really understand what they're doing
but they know that this is what's expected
of them as little boys.
What?
No, no, no, wait, wait, wait.
We love women. We love women. We love women.
Not like transgender.
Yes, sir. We love everybody.
No, no.
What have I done?
And that didn't start.
Like, that's not Sneakos fault.
That's not Sneakos fault.
That is their parents' fault.
And that is a community and cultural failure for those boys.
And so we need more parents to be educated on what their kids are accessing online.
We need more parents to be thinking critically about the tropes and cultural norms that they're reproducing.
in their home, whether they realize it or not.
Even I know progressive parents that are surprised at how misogynistic their children can be.
We reclaim more of Gen Z.
I heard we got some of Gen Z back in the last year.
They were like, whoa, that whole Trump thing seemed cool at the time, but maybe that was a bad idea.
Yay, we don't let it even get close with Gen Alpha.
We get Gen Alpha a bunch of Stephen Universe DVDs and whatever stuff we can to kind of coax a
of that nonsense out of them. That is going to be really the bigger fix beyond the things that we know,
material conditions and economics and join labor unions, all the good lefty stuff we know about.
But the thing that we're often missing is how we're raising the children up to be primed for
this type of nonsense.
Caroline, any parting words for you?
Oh, boy. So many. But what I will say is for men out there, you know, when you see a photo of a woman
and you think she's with a man who's less attractive than her and you go,
what's going on here?
Surely, oh, it must be he's paying for her or there's got to be some other external factor.
Maybe it's because he's nice to her.
Maybe it's because he's kind.
Maybe it's because he's a person that she connects with.
And that's why she's with him.
And I think maybe you should listen less to other men,
especially ones who are making money off of your insecurities,
off of your vulnerabilities and who are selling you whatever,
maybe you should listen to what women say.
Maybe you should listen to the advice of women on how to talk to women,
on what masculinity can look like.
And it doesn't have to look like the way that you have been bought and sold on.
And I think men, one thing to work on is being so confident in your manliness
that you don't have to perform it.
Being so confident in and secure in your masculinity
that it doesn't look like one specific way
and one specific way that really comes at your and everyone else's expense.
So, men, be free.
That's what I want for you.
I want you to be free.
And if all else fails, join a band.
Hey, hey, hey, hey.
Come on, I got to crack a joke at the end.
You know what?
It was a good one.
I liked that we came, we brought it back.
FD and Caroline, thank you so much for being here today.
Thank you so much for helping me muddle through this mess.
Where can people find more of your stuff?
Thank you so much for having me, Matt.
Thank you, Caroline, for letting me indulge here.
This is fun.
I have a big video coming out, February 16th.
God willing. It is the biggest video of my career, at least from a personal psychological standpoint,
it's about Tyler Perry. Oh, I will be sad. Good. I often wonder how much Tyler Perry
penetrates different cultures, but at least within my perspective, it's a big deal. And yeah,
you can find me FD Signifier and all my various side channels. Thank you for having me and I hope this
was good. Are those your kids in the back? Yes. So speaking of kids, go take care of them.
So speaking of because FD, you are amazing.
Thank you for your work.
Thank you for your voice.
Awesome.
I appreciate that love.
I appreciate the opportunity to come talk.
You can find me primarily on Twitch.
I stream too much, trying to actually stream a little bit less, but just about every night.
I am on Twitch at Caroline Kwan.
I am a pop culture justice warrior.
That's my new title now.
We are out here as PCJWs.
The anti-Bret Cooper.
Actually, though.
I am basically trying to counter Candace Owens and Brett Cooper and these right-wing girly pops in pop culture.
Thank you for having me.
Thank you for doing this.
Thank you for being you.
And thank you, the listener, for making it so far.
As always, I am so grateful that you chose to spend your hour or two with the A Bit
Brody podcast.
What are we renaming it?
The A Bit Normal podcast.
Just be a bit normal.
I love you so much.
I will see you next time.
and until that, stay fruity.
Woo-hoo!
That was bleak.
