In online communities celebrating misogyny and decrying men's so-called “involuntary celibacy”, the suspect in the April 23 van attack in Toronto was being as a “new saint”. This caused some on social media to urge a closer look at the link between such groups and mass violence.
Alek Minassian is the latest suspect in a mass killing to be linked to the This is an online culture where men have spread misogynist rhetoric for years — often and vehemently promoting the assumption that they are owed sexual relationships with women. Many such men declare themselves “involuntarily celibate", or “incel”, if they lack success in dating.
The often violent discussions that take place in such communities led Reddit to its incel subreddit last November. It moved to ban content that “encourages, glorifies, incites, or calls for violence or physical harm against an individual or group of people”.
Toronto police and Facebook officials, minutes before he allegedly drove a van into a crowd of pedestrians walking along a busy thoroughfare, 10 people, Minassian posted a message on his since-deleted Facebook account, stating: “The Incel Rebellion has already begun!...All hail the Supreme Gentleman Elliot Rodger!”
Rodger was the in a 2014 mass killing in Isla Vista, California. He killed six people after uploading a video to YouTube in which heas “the supreme gentleman”. He explained he wanted “retribution” for women who had not been attracted to him.
Other recent attacks that have been linked to misogyny include aat a Pittsburgh-area gym, where George Sodini killed three women after writing about his history of sexual rejection, and the 2007 Virginia Tech shooting, whose had “left a rambling note raging against women and rich kids” and had previously stalked and harassed women.
Law enforcement officials have pointed to Minassian’s as the motivating factor behind the attack. But critics stressed the suspect’s praise of an avowed misogynist and references to the “incel” community should not be dismissed.
“In the weeks to come we’ll learn more about the killer’s mental health, about his childhood, his education, his work, his social relationships,” Emer O’Toole in The Guardian on April 24. "These are important windows on to the tragedy.
“But if involvement in misogynistic online communities is indeed part of the picture here, we need to resist any narrative that would push this into the background. Hatred of women is not a mental illness; it is a widespread and dangerous social problem. It is a problem we need to address before more people die.”
[Reprinted from .]