Modern Wisdom - #858 - George TheTinMen - Why Aren’t Men’s Issues Being Taken Seriously?

Episode Date: October 31, 2024

George from TheTinMen is a content creator, pro-men’s advocate and a researcher. Why is it so hard to advocate for the problems of boys and men? If truly we care about half of the population flouris...hing and living lives they enjoy, why is it so unpopular to talk about the challenges they're facing? Expect to learn what George thinks the current wold of advocacy for men looks like, why the press struggles to define what “healthy masculinity” is, the lessons we can learn from the rise of the Manosphere, the hidden effects of bullying on boys' mental health, whether White Guys For Harris actually helped men and much more… Sponsors: See discounts for all the products I use and recommend: https://chriswillx.com/deals Get $350 off the Pod 4 Ultra at https://eightsleep.com/modernwisdom (use code MODERNWISDOM) Sign up for a one-dollar-per-month trial period from Shopify at https://shopify.com/modernwisdom (automatically applied at checkout) Get a Free Gift, 5 Free Travel Packs, Free Liquid Vitamin D and more from AG1 at https://drinkag1.com/modernwisdom (automatically applied at checkout) Extra Stuff: Get my free reading list of 100 books to read before you die: https://chriswillx.com/books Try my productivity energy drink Neutonic: https://neutonic.com/modernwisdom Episodes You Might Enjoy: #577 - David Goggins - This Is How To Master Your Life: https://tinyurl.com/43hv6y59 #712 - Dr Jordan Peterson - How To Destroy Your Negative Beliefs: https://tinyurl.com/2rtz7avf #700 - Dr Andrew Huberman - The Secret Tools To Hack Your Brain: https://tinyurl.com/3ccn5vkp - Get In Touch: Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/chriswillx Twitter: https://www.twitter.com/chriswillx YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/modernwisdompodcast Email: https://chriswillx.com/contact - Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

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Starting point is 00:00:00 Hello everybody, welcome back to the show. My guest today is George from the Tin Men. He's a content creator, pro-men's advocate, and a researcher. Why is it so hard to advocate for the problems of boys and men? If we truly care about half of the population flourishing and living lives that they actually enjoy, why is it so unpopular to talk about any of the challenges that they're facing? Expect to learn what George thinks of the current world of advocacy for men,
Starting point is 00:00:27 why the press struggles to define what healthy masculinity is, the lessons we can learn from the rise of the Manosphere, the hidden effects of bullying on boys' mental health, whether white guys for Harris actually helped men at all, and much more. Sleep isn't just about how long you rest, but how well your body stays in its optimal temperature range throughout the night, which is where 8Sleep comes in. Simply add their brand new Pod 4 Ultra to your mattress like a fitted sheet and it will automatically cool down or warm up each side of your bed up to 20 degrees.
Starting point is 00:01:00 Its integrated sensors track your sleep time, your sleep phases, your HRV, your snoring and your heart rate with 99% accuracy. Plus, their autopilot feature makes smart temperature adjustments throughout the night, enhancing your deep and REM sleep in real time. Which is why 8Sleep has been clinically proven to give you up to one hour more of quality sleep every night. Best of all, they ship to the US, Canada, UK, Europe and Australia and they offer a 30-day sleep trial. This episode is brought to you by Shopify. Businesses that sell more, sell on Shopify, which is why they are the global force behind Gymshark, Skims, Allo and Newtonic. When it comes to converting browsers into buyers, they are best in class. Their checkout is 36% better on average compared to other leading e-commerce platforms and their shop pay means that you can boost conversions by up to 50%.
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Starting point is 00:02:33 That's Shopify.com slash modern wisdom to upgrade your selling today. This episode is brought to you by AG1. Over the span of about a year, I tried pretty much every green string that I could find trying to work out which one was best and I came across AG1 which I've stuck with for over three years because it's the best it's the most comprehensive it's the most highly tested and rigorously formulated they genuinely care about holistic health and that is why I've got my mum and my dad to start taking it and my friends as well And if I found something better, I would switch but I haven't which is why I still use it
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Starting point is 00:04:13 Occult hero Ned Brockman's gruelling 1600 kilometre charity run has Aussies talking, but not everybody sees it in a positive light. What do you think about this? I mean, it's just one more absurd headline, adding to the many, many things that we can blame for blame toxic masculinity for, which is absurd. I mean, for me, it's part of like a bigger problem where men's mental health needs are often sort of different to women's and like some of the crazy things men do, such as run 1600 kilometers and raising millions of pounds are just outside the view, the view of people
Starting point is 00:04:46 like Jill, who think such a thing is toxic and not actually an amazing achievement for anyone. Despite the fact that they're raising tons of money for charity as well. Yeah. So a man, he ran 1600 kilometers, raised maybe one and a half million Australian dollars for the homeless, which is like, I don't know what more you could possibly want. That's still toxic masculinity somehow. And it just isn't.
Starting point is 00:05:08 And yeah, I mean, one of the many absurd, we could have a whole podcast just going through these headlines and just one of the many things that just washes over you. But thankfully some things are just a little bit too stupid to be offensive. And that sort of qualifies very much so that category. What do you make of the current world of advocacy for men? Honestly, it seems to be quite splitting a little bit. I feel like as it becomes, as any movement becomes sort of larger, reaches a critical mass, which is a lovely thing.
Starting point is 00:05:37 It sort of, it seems to be fragmenting into different view sets, which we can't really afford to do. And I guess the elephant in the room is certain large organizations that are becoming, in my opinion, too entwined in politics and losing sight of their own mission statement, which is the first, second, and third priority is to help men and ultimately save men's lives.
Starting point is 00:05:57 That's my priority. And so unfortunately, we're in an area of advocacy that is just innately unpopular right now. It's uncomfortable and it requires, you know, making some sacrifices and doing some things that are not going to get you a huge amount of credit, but are necessary on the list. It's interesting to think about when a movement is too big to be small, but too small to be big. It's still kind of revolutionary, but has sufficient size to warrant splinter factions and different sort of approaches. Well, I'm really interested in things like the diffusion of innovation where basically
Starting point is 00:06:31 maps how a movement becomes viral. And as I'm sure you know, you need about 13% of adoption by the public for it to go viral and then it hits that mass market success. So you have that bell curve of the diffusion of innovation. And I've always wondered where are we on that bell curve? How, when are we going to reach that tipping point of 12% where the mass, the mass market, the early and late majority as it's called, they're like, actually, this is something that I can now get on board with. The risk is now at an acceptable level. And I'm like, we're getting there.
Starting point is 00:07:01 And I mean, I really want to get there together. I really feel like we need to work as a single unit here and we need to keep communicating and we need to sort of have the same shared objectives. So yeah, I mean, that's where I want to get to and perhaps that would be the end product of this podcast. Who are the market leaders in this? The market leaders. I mean, the money, the money is owned by Movember, which is the elephant in the
Starting point is 00:07:23 room, uh, Movember and people think Movember, which is the elephant in the room. Movember and people think Movember is just a meme and it is a meme. Movember is like the whole idea of men growing a mustache for November. It started in Australia maybe 20 years ago, but it's far more than that. Movember now is one of the largest, most powerful NGOs in the world. I think it's one of the top 50. It's absolutely the largest, richest, most powerful men's health and male suicide charity on the planet. And they are the ones that have the money. To be honest, they're the ones that through which the money is given. They don't do work directly
Starting point is 00:07:54 themselves. They take money from different donors that grow in their mustaches, fund runs, bake sales, et cetera, and they'll distribute it to other people, researchers and groups and various other things. So that's how it's structured. And to be honest, that comes with risks in its own right too. How so? Well, I feel like any, any organization that has a huge amount of money and power and influence and others that don't, you've got to remember the men's health and male suicide sector, the men's sector is deeply
Starting point is 00:08:25 impoverished. I know people that are doing groundbreaking research and yet they're working second jobs, they're sitting dogs. I know a guy called Jody who's trying to open the first men's abuse shelter in the UK and he is sat right now at his kitchen table just answering his own phone, just answering the phone to men. He's taken a thousand calls this year. He's not been paid a single penny. He's taken no salary and he's just answering the phone to men. He's taken a thousand calls this year. He's not been paid a single penny.
Starting point is 00:08:45 He's taken no salary. And he's just answering the phone to anyone who'll call him. And there's so many charities, they get nothing. I gotta mention Mankind, who are an amazing charity. They own the only shelters in England for male abuse victims. Zero pounds from the government, nationally that is, zero pounds.
Starting point is 00:09:03 So there is a massive lack of money and funding in the men's sector because it's all going to people like November. And it's frustrating because everyone talks to me about, no one cares about men. No one cares about men. And they do care about men because there's so much money raised for November. Lots of people doing amazing work in November right now. But the money just doesn't seem to be getting spent in the right way, in my opinion. And, uh, that's the problem. It's not a lack of effort and not a lack of ambition or generosity or compassion from the public.
Starting point is 00:09:36 It's, it's just not being used in the right way. What do you make of? Yeah. What do you make of Movember's efforts? Well, I mean, I want to qualify everything I say right now, Movember is a massive organization, massive. I think they've done about 1200 projects in about 20 countries, including the, mainly the UK, Canada, Australia and America. They do amazing work.
Starting point is 00:09:58 They do amazing work, especially in things like prostate cancer and men's health. They did some really great work recently where they're talking about men who die young in the UK. So they found that I think 15 men die young every hour in the UK. So in the end of this podcast, that's 15 men who have died young. Most of those deaths are avoidable if we can increase the health literacy amongst men and do more work for men's health. And no one can argue that. That's really, really important. My issue with Movember was within their mental health area and certain things in terms of prioritizing sort of parts of it. I mean, it's hard to dance around
Starting point is 00:10:38 the subject, but basically my main issue is their recent advocacy around violence against women. And you've got to remember violence against men is a massive deal that no one's taken seriously. One in three victims of abuse in the UK is a man. And that is me being conservative. In America it's one in two. If you look at the CDC data it's one in two. And like people might say that's not true, but go check it for yourself. The research, I'm happy to present you so much research. I can literally give you hundreds of papers to prove that, but it's at least one in three. And there is virtually no refuge for men and virtually no refuge for in America or the UK. And I think in America,
Starting point is 00:11:13 there's maybe two shelters for men. In the UK, there's a few more, but really nothing. And remember recently, and this is where a point of contention I have of them, they've been sort of allying themselves with organisations that are trying to end violence against women and even giving money over to violence against women. And that to me is not right. That to me intuitively is not right. That does not make sense, especially what I know about how impoverished and how desperate men's shelters and people like Jodie, my friend, are for money. I need to qualify another thing is that when I criticise violence against women, that for money. I need to qualify another thing is that when I
Starting point is 00:11:45 criticize violence against women, that does not mean I am pro-violence against women. No one is pro-fucking-violence against women. The naming of violence against women is extremely effective because it's named after really important sentiment. Violence against women, like who doesn't want to end that? I want to end violence against women just as much as anyone does. The issue that I have are a certain amount of policies around violence against women just as much as anyone does. The issue that I have are a certain amount policies around violence against women that basically gender it. Gendered violence, meaning that men and boys are taking out the picture and the funding, the policy, the shelter is given exclusively more or less to women and girls. And those, that one in three victims of men, which in the UK represents about 750,000 men every year, there's nowhere for them to go.
Starting point is 00:12:28 There's no, there's really no help. What is the abuse that you're talking about? What constitutes abuse or gendered violence? What is that? Difficult. I mean, this is why some stats say one in three, some stats say one in two. In Australia, it's one in four victims is a man. It really depends on what you consider violence. It does that include emotional, psychological abuse or financial abuse or abuse by proxy?
Starting point is 00:12:49 Are we specifically talking about physical abuse? In America, if you're talking specifically about violence, physical violence by a partner, there are actually more male victims of physical violence by partner according to the CDC. And that's just a shocking stat, but that is also true. And I, that report, that survey comes out every few years. And I dread the years where there are more victims, more male victims, cause I'm like, it's going to be so fucking unpopular. Your point being that you would have to talk about it. You're going to report on the actual stats and you can't say something
Starting point is 00:13:21 that would be more popular publicly. You have to say the thing, which is unpopular publicly. Well, let's just say I prefer it when it's one in three, because it just takes the edge off a little bit when it's more, when there's a greater disparity of men. Uh, but what would you say, what would you say to the people who go, ah, that there's a, an imbalance in abuse, especially gendered violence, because men are more effective. Men are stronger, therefore the severity of the violence in one direction over the other is going to be much worse.
Starting point is 00:13:51 I'd say that's sometimes true, sometimes not. The latest data for the Office for National Statistics, which is the sort of government's data body in the UK, finds the exact opposite. It finds that men are more often injured. So male victims are more often injured. So male victims are more often injured by female partners than the opposite way around. So that intuitively sounds right. And I would totally understand people that would say that. And it often is right, but not always. I mean, this is the issue I find with the discussion of violence against women is that it so often becomes centered around the very, very extreme, like
Starting point is 00:14:24 mostly homicides, like people who are killed by partners. And that is mostly women, absolutely. But that is also a small part of the problem. That is like, you know, tiny, tiny percentage. I interviewed Don Dutton recently and he summarized it well. He said, we measure domestic homicide per million couples, but we measure domestic violence per hundred couples. So you can sort of see the disparity out It's a much different scale and that's not to say Domestic homicide isn't important and that's not to say that men aren't also killed by their partners
Starting point is 00:14:53 I think it's about one in four victims of domestic homicide is a man and if you look at male male victims So including children like it's even closer. It's really close to 50-50 because there's a massive disproportionate number of boys killed, often by parents. So if you bring in the boys, then it's very similar. I think in Australia, I think it's about 36 males and 44 females killed in domestic violence rather than intimate partner violence. And it's so frustrating because people say, well, women are just killing their partners from self-defence. And I'm not talking about women and men, I'm talking about children. And if you consider that the majority of males killed by their partners by family members are boys, no matter who is defending themselves
Starting point is 00:15:38 from a child, it doesn't make sense. And I mean, I would just, I guess I'd underscore it by saying every victim needs to be spoken about. It doesn't matter if it's 1%. It doesn't make sense. And I mean, I would just, I guess I'd underscore it by saying every, every victim needs to be spoken about. I don't, it doesn't matter if it's 1%. Doesn't matter. Like it doesn't matter if it's just one single person. I would say they're just as important as anyone else. What's the issue of a men's health charity, like Movember getting behind a movement that tries to reduce violence against women?
Starting point is 00:16:02 Nothing. But Movember is a men's health charity and there was lots of work, by no means enough, but lots more work being done to end violence against women. Violence against men isn't even a thing. Quite literally isn't a thing. If you're a male victim of abuse in the UK, you are literally classified as a victim of violence against women. How so?
Starting point is 00:16:24 It's just like literally, like the government released the document not long ago, two years ago, and the title of this document was supporting male victims of violence against women. And I'm like, so you're a man being abused by women and you're somehow a victim of violence against women. So we've arrived at this crazy sort of backward somersault of sort of mental gymnastics where a male victim is now a victim of violence against women.
Starting point is 00:16:52 Give me the steelman case for why it's framed like that and then give me the more concerning potential reason for why it's framed like that. One of my more tin hat reasons behind why we don't care about men. I asked Erin Pizzi this, who was the founder of the first domestic violence shelter anywhere in the world, which was in Chiswick in London. And I, I, she was thrown out of her own charity because she wanted to help male victims.
Starting point is 00:17:19 And, uh, she, she wants to talk about interactive violence where both partners are abusing each other. And which is half of all domestic violence is that I Asked her why are we doing this? Why don't we help men? Why is not why is there not more support and she just said one word money? She said money like they don't want to share the money like if you look at
Starting point is 00:17:37 Sandra Hawley who what who was the CEO of Refuge UK which is the largest domestic violence charity in the world like she's she's on record saying if we were to say men are as likely to be abused as women, we would have to share the money and they don't want to do that. So there, but this is going in the other direction. You're talking about an organization like Movember, which already has lots of money, probably I would guess receives like 90 out of every hundred pounds given to men in one form or another, maybe even more.
Starting point is 00:18:05 I don't understand why this reverse trick is being played in that regard. If the women's charities already have more than they need, why is a men's charity donating money to it? They seem to stick to a more antiquated model of men's health that is more around, you know, like blood pressure and obesity and like the physical side of men's health. Whereas I want to look more broadly, I'm more interested in the systemic societal causes of men's health that hurt men. So that's where the divide is. Like I would say, for instance, a man who's raped in prison is a men's health issue. A father losing his child in family court is a men's health issue. A husband abused by his wife is a men's health issue. A boy being bullied is a men's issue. Like men's health isn't just about prostates and you know, BMIs and all that. And those are
Starting point is 00:18:54 important, but we have a different definition of men's health. That's where the divide is. I think men's health is out there and November seems to think men's health is in here and they just don't consider it. They consider, from what I can understand, they consider violence against women a men's health issue, which doesn't make a huge amount of sense to me, but from their perspective, they want to help treat violent men to stop them from abusing women, which is a noble cause. But again, you're just looking at one side of the problem. Like you can't solve any equation with one side.
Starting point is 00:19:28 You've got to get both sides. Like both partners need help. Like I said, half of all violent relationships, both partners are doing it. They're both participating in a cycle of violence that spirals out of control. And you know, an argument to become yelling and yelling becomes shoving and shoving. Someone gets slapped and then the slapping becomes punching and it gets worse and worse and worse. So it's certainly important to help men be less violent through certain treatments, but
Starting point is 00:19:53 that again, that's only one half of that cycle. So yeah, they want to reduce violence by men against women by seeing it as a men's health issue and I guess doing certain therapies to encourage what they consider healthy masculinity, which is a rather nebulous term. So violence against women is a men's health issue and violence against men is a violence against women issue. Yeah. I mean, that's how it's, they certainly don't consider violence against men, a
Starting point is 00:20:24 men's health issue, but violence against women is a men's health issue. And it just, it just reminds me of like this strange political dancing where they're basically, in my opinion, they're just afraid. They're afraid. Why I understand why, look, look, I had this conversation with Richard Reeves, which you got to see, and I, I, I get this sense that anybody who is trying to run a public facing legitimate, not like you or me illegitimate, uh, you know, outside of wedlock, uh, communicators, um, anybody that's trying to do forward-facing stuff
Starting point is 00:20:59 in Washington, DC and Sydney, Australia and London, England, and is trying to have these conversations, they need to do the, pay this penance. They need to sort of kiss the ring of the existing gendered mental health, gendered health, gendered violence, gendered marital issues, cliches and stereotypes and caricatures and the way that this stuff runs, because it is it is still too big to be small, too small to be big. It is not yet sufficiently big or widely adopted that you can talk about the problems of boys and men without first saying, we know the problems of girls and women are a big deal as well.
Starting point is 00:21:37 And this is like a structural operational policy, political nod. The, we know, we know, we know, look, we all have the support or the support structural operational policy, political nod. We know, we know, we know, look, we, all of the support or the support that we give to men can't be done. You can't call us castigators for being uncaring misogynists that are anti-feminist. Look, we gave money to Vogue. And in that regard, I think, well, maybe that's a weird kind of entry price that you need to pay.
Starting point is 00:22:05 But something tells me in your opinion that you don't need to do this. I mean, it's mostly bullshit, in my opinion, to call it what it is. Like, I mean, go look and talk about your Richard Reeves podcast. It's self-evident. Now you both spent 20 minutes talking about that. The first 20 minutes of a podcast about men, you spent talking about women. And I was like, that makes the point. Like how many people dropped out as a result? Probably quite a few and it's not good enough, like you're only undermining
Starting point is 00:22:30 yourself long term. It reminds you of people that say oh well I'm not a racist but well I might don't fucking say it then. Don't say it, don't need to say that, like the proof is self-evident like no one could ever accuse Richard Reeves of being a misogynist and someone that would should not be bargained with, can't be bargained with. I just feel all this penance paying and apologies and this long litany of small print that has to seemingly come with every single piece of well-meaning advocacy. You're just burning bridges with people like me that are not doing that and refuse to do that. And it's not, I don't think it works long-term. I think you weaken your point. I feel like you're setting a precedent that we don't want to follow.
Starting point is 00:23:11 And we won't be following. Um, what's the biggest elephant in the room around men's issues at the moment? Oh, the clear intertwining of politics. Once money's put into large organisations, like I've been very enthused by Richard, for example, $20 million from Melinda Gates, November, about to open up a $100 million November Institute, there's money to be spent. And with money becomes expectations and politics. So I can understand their political expectations. I'm
Starting point is 00:23:46 sure they're sat around tables, women's organizations being told what they can and can't say, what they can and can't argue about. I have no doubt people at Movember care. Actually, I know they do care because people have contacted me from within Movember to say, we do care, but we can't do anything because we're playing this political dance and that is just not good enough for Movember to seemingly be scared of just sharing the truth of male victims of abuse in this example, to be afraid or brow-beaten by, who knows, unknown feminist organisations it seems. And also our own government are afraid of these organisations and they're on record in saying that.
Starting point is 00:24:22 It is not good enough. Like I'm sat here with nothing. I don't have that hundred million dollars. I don't have their large legal teams that defend me. Uh, I have no, I'm just sat here with a laptop and I'm doing the hard work. I'm the one that's actually taking risks and those like me and to hear these large organizations suggest that they're afraid, you know, we would love to do what you do, George, but you know, we just can't say, of course you can go to
Starting point is 00:24:43 one person that can do it. You are not a small organization. Remember you're one of the biggest, you are the biggest men's health organization on the planet. Like if not you, then who is it going to be? And you don't see it from women's organizations like more power to them. They're constantly pushing the boundaries. They're constantly asking for more.
Starting point is 00:25:01 They're constantly making more and more things, women's health issues as they write, as they should. They don't tow the line in the same way. They're not brow-baiting. They're not afraid and that's admirable. And I would just remind them of your obligation to men. You are obligated to help men. That is your first, second or third priority and that is really it. I'm sorry if that's uncomfortable.
Starting point is 00:25:22 I'm sorry if saying that in a meeting is going to get you into trouble. I'm sorry if you know, it's hard. I'm sorry if you lose money, but unfortunately your job is to save men's lives. And I'm sorry, but that is unpopular. The things that are causing male suicide are often unpopular to talk about. And if you can't talk about them, then this isn't for you. Like, what are the, what are the unpopular things causing male suicide? Well, Martin Seeger has attributed 20% of male suicides in the UK to family breakdown and child custody battles. So a child being lost in a family court and a relationship breakdown, that's 20% of suicides. And that's what I mean. That is a men's health issue in my opinion. Of course it is. And if we could fix family courts and if we could help support men after divorces,
Starting point is 00:26:07 we could potentially reduce male suicide by up to 20% at that. Again, domestic violence, I said it has a massive detrimental impact on men's health. 11% of men being abused will consider suicide. And like I said, 750,000 men being abused in the UK every single year. What's 11% of that? You do the maths. In America, it's 50 million men in their lifetime being abused. 11% of that are potentially at risk to suicide. And these are the men that are just being betrayed, left behind because powerful political men's health advocates are just too afraid to say the simple truth
Starting point is 00:26:46 that domestic violence is not gendered. There are a significant amount of male victims of abuse and that abuse has a massive detrimental impact on their mental health, does lead to suicide and they are not being helped. Like I'm really struggling to make sense of it myself. Well, you had a, you got to have a chat with Zach and maybe some more people. I don't know. What did you learn when you had a chat with Mobeba? And the reason I ask is I must have done between 30 and 50 episodes on this podcast
Starting point is 00:27:15 talking about mental health relating to men in one form or another, whether it's loneliness, sexual dynamics, mating markets, socioeconomic status, education, employmentconomic status, education, employment, training, uh, in cell going deep into the world's like leading researchers on the Intel movement, all sorts of stuff, everything, everything from top to bottom, left to right. And, um, I have asked myself the question, why am I not a massive, like
Starting point is 00:27:41 card carrying Movember guy? Like I should be, I should be the, I should be the poster boy for always talking about, I love the work that they're doing, they're doing this, they're doing that, they're doing the other, you know, I should be like balls deep behind them, uh, literally saying, saying that I love the work that they do. And for some reason I'm not. So I'm interested in what you learned when you got to speak to the people running Movember and what, what assumptions maybe were, uh, certified
Starting point is 00:28:09 and what questions were unanswered and answered and so on. If you're going to hand over, I think they handed over maybe 3 million Australian dollars to violence against women. I'm like, well then presumably you're going to give at least that to violence against men and as far as I can tell they're not, there just doesn't seem to be any plans to open any shelters for men or do any programs for men or to help violent women be less violent. I just want to know, what are you doing? They're just basically making things either men's health or not men's health,
Starting point is 00:28:34 because one is politically convenient and one isn't. And that the stuff that is politically convenient seems to be more things around eating habits, physical fitness, diet interventions, prostate cancer. Which are important, which are important, but men's health isn't just in here. Men's health is out there. And like, they're just holding onto an antiquated model of men's health. Well, I don't know that you say that they've got lots of money flowing in. Maybe they don't have enough money to be able to afford to raise shelters or give
Starting point is 00:29:03 your mate Jody some cash so that he can man his one person thousand call phone line. No, I mean, certainly lots of money flowing in, but a lot less flowing out. It seems like a UK Charity Commission is basically a space where you can actually look at the accounts of all the charities, which is excellent. And it's quite clear. You can look at Movember's accounts and you can see they have at least 35 million pounds in cash Perhaps up to 50 million pounds. It's difficult because 50 million assets 35 million in cash at least
Starting point is 00:29:36 And that's not right. They're not that's not their money. First of all, that's money They were given to help men in the ways I've described and it's just sat in a bank account Right 35 million pounds or more sat in a bank account not being spent accumulating interest it seems for their own benefit that is not right especially like I said I know people that are desperate for just a tiny tiny percentage I'm here running like crowd funders like rattling a tin can for money to help my friends to help support male victims abuse. Remember I sat back on a big mountain of cash.
Starting point is 00:30:08 I cannot explain how much I could do with just 0.1% of that amount of cash. I could do huge things. And yeah, they say it in their own accounts. They say they are at risk of reputational damage if people find out how much cash they are sat on. And it is a lot. It's 35, they are at risk of reputational damage. If people find out how much cash they are sat on, and it is a lot, it's 35 million pounds. Why do you think that would be the case? Cause it's not like people can be drawing massive salaries or else everyone will be up in arms. So I don't know where that money goes.
Starting point is 00:30:37 I have no idea. All I know is that they have a lot of cash. I know that their trustees, there are seven trustees of Movember, Movember Europe, which is basically the UK arm of Movember. And not one of those trustees is based in the UK. Not one of those trustees is even living in Europe. They're all based in North America and Australia. So I guess difficult questions at Movember are going to be asked.
Starting point is 00:30:57 I'm now asking, and I will continue to ask, is why are you sitting on so much cash when the men's health industry is struggling so much? And why are none of your trustees based in this country? Why are not? How could a trustee who's not even living in this country claim to know how best to spend men and money for British men? That's a good question. You used a term earlier on, which I'm seeing, uh, increasingly thrown around, which is healthy masculinity, healthy masculinity being what I think seems to be the answer to toxic masculinity, or at least an attempted sort of retconning of, of what that is.
Starting point is 00:31:38 I've heard that there is potentially some footage from guests who've been on this podcast being featured in an upcoming anti-Manosphere campaign by November. Do you think this is where they should be focusing their attention? No, I mean, remember, I seem to be declaring war on the Manosphere. I didn't know what the Manosphere is. I'm sure I'm seen as part of it. I'm sure you're seen as some sort of president of the Manosphere.
Starting point is 00:32:01 And like the frustrating thing is like, I hate the Manosphere. I hate the Red Pool. I'm more than happy to point and make fun of people like Andrew Tate and I will bang that drum forever. But I don't think it needs to be talked about in the same way that they won't talk about it. I don't think it needs to be a war against the Manosphere. Like I feel the Manosphere is just burning. I feel like it's gone in many ways. What is Andrew Tick doing these days? He just seems to have descended into madness. Like the people that were once sort of, um, so, uh, symbolic of the manosphere, like where are they?
Starting point is 00:32:32 It's gone. It's over. Let's move on. Let's actually, you know, actually help men. Let's spend our money setting a better example for boys. So they don't have to go to these sort of nefarious figures. I feel like just fighting the manosphere. You're just fighting ghosts.
Starting point is 00:32:45 You just, what are you fighting? Like what? Shadow boxing, shadow boxing, an imaginary opponent. Yeah. I always think of it like an angry gorilla fighting mist is how I describe it. Does Movember want to challenge what it is to be a man? Yeah. So, I mean, there are certain things that Movember very keen to encourage all of us
Starting point is 00:33:02 to challenge stereotypes about what it is to be a man, which I am on board with, but they don't seem to want to challenge themselves, their own gender stereotypes, i.e. that men are violent and women are victims. Violence against women, in my opinion, that is a stereotype in its own right. So that ought to be challenged. This gender narrative of domestic violence is a stereotype. That needs to be challenged too. So it's not good enough to make sure the demand that we challenge our stereotypes if you're not going to challenge your own. So yes, I just think it's absurd amount of time. They seem to be spending partying in a Manosphere.
Starting point is 00:33:35 I don't know who's even part of it. I don't know what it is. And like, you know, there's better things to be spending your money on. It stinks to me as somebody who's at the coal face of internet culture. And I think that you're right as well. I think that whatever the Manasphere was or is, uh, is largely on a decline. I mean, you're selling your stock like these NFTs, you're just pumping them. You can't, can't wait to get rid of them because they're declining by the day.
Starting point is 00:33:59 I don't think that whatever it was, but it stinks massively of people in the mainstream media, finally hearing a term that is catchy and does catch on. Uh, and go, this is a big deal. And he goes, no, it was a big deal in 2021. It was a big deal, but the internet moves quickly, but there's, you know, the conceptual inertia of these big fuck off lumbering behemoths that take forever to actually catch up to anything. And this isn't me saying that that's how it is about November, but I'm starting to see the Manosphere be talked about more online toxic masculinity sort of continued.
Starting point is 00:34:33 I mean, that's still, I definitely put a little bit of cash into that stock. If I could, that's certainly something that seems to be continuing to, uh, to drive, drive the stock price up, but like, it just doesn't seem to me to be on the money about exactly where the conversation around men is happening online. And then when you say, you know, challenging stereotypes, I would be absolutely fascinated to hear what the world sort of thinks of a stereotype like Chris Bumstead. So Chris is just retired as six time Mr.
Starting point is 00:35:10 Olympia Classic Physique champion. He's cried on stage during his acceptance speech, I think, at least 50% of the time, if not four out of six of the times, fully broke down crying when he did his leaving speech, regularly tell stories about how he goes to therapy, regularly tell stories about how he breaks down in his girlfriend's arms before he does this thing. Not one person is calling him a soft or weak or vulnerable or, you know, like a, a puss boy and on the flip side, nobody would also call him toxically masculine.
Starting point is 00:35:41 But my, my concern is that when you take this sort of rough hewn, anybody on the internet talking about stuff that is pro men, uh, in a manner that doesn't concord with our cliches of what people on the internet think masculinity is, which is Chris Bumstead, big, big hulking guy must be toxically masculine. He needs to, there's no place for him to fit. And for me, I would love like make him minister for men. He's just retired from bodybuilding. I'd love to have Chris Bumstead as minister for men.
Starting point is 00:36:10 You've got 25 million men mostly that follow him on Instagram because by the way, if you get big muscles it's not girls that care, it's guys that care. And he would make a phenomenal role model. He encourages me to be a braver, more open, more vulnerable, emotionally attuned man. That's what, and that, but the problem with it is it doesn't fit into an easy narrative, right?
Starting point is 00:36:36 Because he doesn't look the way that he presents. He presents in the way of like a sort of wuss guy that's never actually done any, like a super sort of a agreeable dude, but has made all of the achievements of like a sort of wuss guy that's never actually done any, like a super sort of a agreeable dude, but has made all of the achievements of somebody to type a masculine. And it's not easy enough for people to grasp. I don't think. Um, but yeah, I just, I don't know the challenging stereotypes thing is, is challenging them, challenging them in the most sort of low resolution way possible. And I just want it to be better. I want there to be better male role models out there.
Starting point is 00:37:09 Well, I would add Jordan Peterson to that. I mean, he's, he's so often mischaracterized. He's, he's absolutely on the hit list for November as again, like some sort of high profile, Manasphere elite. I have no idea, but he is so in touch with, I've seen him crying so many times. Like he is so in touch with I've seen him crying so many times Like he is so in touch with his emotions Yes, some things he says we may not like and it's easy to quote some of that context but he has done a net good for men and boys in my opinion and
Starting point is 00:37:35 Maybe they haven't done he hasn't done away that movember likes other people like but people want to watch him I keep men and boys have voted at their feet, including for people like you, Chris. You started from nothing. You started from your dining room table with a webcam. And you got to where you are because people voted for you by watching your content. Same for me, but to obviously a lesser extent. And I'm like, we are people to be learned from. And so is Jordan Peterson.
Starting point is 00:37:59 So is Chris. Chris Bumstead. And I feel like that's why we need to work together. Like I would love to talk to him and remember and be like, I don't agree with the direction of going in. I think I have valuable lessons to have, um, to lend you. I think Chris would pick up the phone and love to speak to you. If anybody, any organization is really worried about radicalization and men
Starting point is 00:38:21 being pushed toward bad influences. The first thing they need to do is correctly pattern match who is and who isn't a bad actor. Because if they're not careful, they'll just push creators like me away by positioning themselves in opposition to me. Yeah. Like you're making an enemy of an ally. You can't see somebody like anybody that looks through the back catalog of this podcast and doesn't see somebody that cares about men's issues. Like you're high, you're high. You can't, you just simply are unable to interpret content accurately.
Starting point is 00:38:51 And this doesn't matter whether it's Movember or a feminist organization or anything, I'm not anti fucking anything. I'm just pro men's issues. And I, yeah, being told that men are supposed to talk more, but then also being told to shut up when they say things that you find inconvenient. I don't know. It feels like being politically gaslit at a national scale. Just not even that.
Starting point is 00:39:16 Like going back to the start of this podcast, you're talking about the man who ran like I was one of a thousand kilometers and to raise money for homeless people and was mocked for it. It's like the whole meme of like men will, you know, fix a steam engine rather than go to therapy or men will reenact the Holy Roman. I love those. I fucking love those memes. Or like men will dig a massive hole in a beach to avoid, but maybe they are therapy.
Starting point is 00:39:38 Maybe those things are actually therapy to men. Maybe going to the gym is therapy. Maybe taking a dog for a walk is therapy. Maybe reenacting, uh, battle of the bulge is therapy to men, maybe going to the gym is therapy, maybe taking a dog for a walk is therapy, maybe reenacting Battle of the Bulges therapy for men. Like maybe these are actual therapies. And like you used to say they aren't like therapy doesn't have to be sat being sat down talking to a sort of a psychologist.
Starting point is 00:39:58 Like therapy can be anything. And like, you know, we shouldn't be mocking these men that do these amazing things. Like we should be sort of seeing them as pioneers in many ways. Did you see, uh, did you see Russ Cook, that guy that ran the length of Africa? No, but that sounds fascinating. His, uh, hardest geezer on Instagram. And I think he ran, it was either in a full year or maybe even over a year. And he ran basically a marathon every day.
Starting point is 00:40:26 And he's the first person in history to have gone from basically Cape town to whatever the fuck's at the top, Tunisia, Turkey, some shit, whatever's the very, very top. And it took him a year to do that. There's videos, there's some really, really raw videos of him one day he must've drank from a classically unclean drinking sauce and he had vomiting and diarrhea while he's running and
Starting point is 00:40:51 he's just not stopping and he just keeps on going. I can absolutely see a headline that says this is the denial of emotions. This is feeding into the sort of toxic men must always be strong narrative. It's like, no, men want to be strong. They don't, they don't want to feel the compulsion to need to be strong all the time, but they want to be strong. And the difference between telling men, it's okay to talk about your emotions. It's okay to not be strong and competent all the time. And you can't be those things because if you are being those things, you're not choosing to be them is denying from men, one of the greatest sources
Starting point is 00:41:30 of meaning that they have in their life. One of the greatest sources of meaning is doing a thing that's difficult and getting fucking better at it. It's exactly why I like men would rather produce 850 episodes of a podcast than go to therapy, but then actually go to therapy during the last year of a podcast, then go to therapy, but then actually go to therapy during the last year of the podcast. So it always, it always takes me back to Elon Musk. When he first bought Twitter, um, he got rid of all the middle management
Starting point is 00:41:54 and 90% of the coding team. And there's this famous selfie of him and like 20 Asian dudes behind him. And it's him basically saying, I'm going to run this entire company with these people, if you want to work harder than you ever have in your entire life on the most difficult and important problems in coding, come work for me. And he got castigated because it was, this is going back to industrial revolution era, pushing people to work beyond their limits. Are we not, are we not got past this?
Starting point is 00:42:16 What about mental health Mondays and what about holistic Tuesdays and what about, you know, smoothie Wednesdays and stuff like that. This is pushing people to go too hard. And it's like you may be true and maybe even true on average for most people. But there is a huge subset of people for whom you put that kind of a challenge in front of them, or you tell them to run 1600 kilometers for homeless people, or you tell them to run the entire length of Africa and they go. Yes.
Starting point is 00:42:41 Like, do you think that Russ Cook ran daily for over a year because of toxic masculinity, or do you think he did it because it gave him an innate feeling of meaning and contribution and, and conquer and mastery, denying that is literally denying him, denying his nature. And we all know how dangerous that can be in the modern world of the LGBTQIA plus community. So, you know, his, him living out his truth was him running every single day because that's where he took his meaning from.
Starting point is 00:43:16 Yeah. I mean, I have a friend called Sam who walked the length of New Zealand to raise money for boys who are, he's a survivor of sexual abuse himself. And he wants to raise money for, uh, male survivors of abuse. And he walked across the whole of New Zealand, took him I think maybe 70 days. That is, could not be less toxic. That is so admirable. And I just, this idea of, it seems that men like to value achievement. They like to do something. They like to be productive. A lot of women, I've written a lot about this and a lot of women have contacted me and been like, I want this too. I don't like this therapeutic
Starting point is 00:43:47 model of, the psychological model of therapy. I want to do these things too. I want to make the steam engine and I want to sort of reenact the Holy Roman Empire. But we seem to want to vilify these things where men want to do and achieve great things. Like in the way that Elon said, put him in some some manosphere as well. Same for Goggins, perhaps to a greater degree. And sometimes these people can be enforcing like an unhealthy archetype of masculinity, but then sometimes they can just be lifting men up. Like I've, I've seen the videos on Within Movember and they have been leaked to me,
Starting point is 00:44:19 I'm afraid. And I remember the first clip I saw was Andrew Tate and I do not like Andrew Tate. Let me be clear. But the bit he said, and it's not perfectly quoted, but he said something like, you don't achieve anything by talking about it. You achieve it through action. And I was just like, I was like waiting for the offensive bit and that was it. You've picked the most acceptable Andrew Tate quote.
Starting point is 00:44:41 That is some horrible things he said. And I'm like, you've picked something that's actually good. And I was just like, I can't believe that scene is controversial. And what you're saying is really important and true for a lot of people. Men want action, men want change, men want solutions. It goes back to sort of the classic trope of like women want to be heard and men want their problems solved. Like a lot of the time when a woman comes to your problem, they don't want a solution. They just want to be heard and men want their problems solved. Like a lot of the time when a woman comes to your problem they don't want a solution, they just want to be heard. But sometimes men just want a solution. They don't want to be heard, they want an answer and
Starting point is 00:45:12 that's when you get into sort of the men are from Mars, women are from Venus thing where a man's giving a solution where his wife wants to be heard and his wife's not giving a solution because she's just talking or listening. And I don't know, I guess at the bottom of it there's a fundamental difference in generally speaking, how men and women present distress and how men and women want to be helped. And sometimes men more often want a solution or they want to achieve something for a purpose.
Starting point is 00:45:36 You know, this is a Richard Reeves-ism to say that a lot of the time men are told that their biggest problem is that they're just too masculine. That if they were a little bit more like women, if they talked about their problems, if they were less concerned with conquer and mastery and progress, that they would be fine. And you go, well, if I was to deny women what they want, what their predisposition on average is, that would be, that would be like catastrophic.
Starting point is 00:46:03 Like that is probably not far off patriarchy, right? Like you denying the other sexes right to live out their innate inbuilt desires. And like, what is it they want to do? Especially if it's not like running 1600 kilometers is toxic masculinity. Like who's that hurting shy of the tarmac. Who's that hurting who's David Goggins? Like, yes. Okay. Is David perhaps, would David benefit from like a century or so of a little bit
Starting point is 00:46:34 of talk therapy to get in touch with his emotions? Yeah, maybe, but he lives a very important niche, I think, which is someone who doesn't ever stop. Okay. What is it like if you don't have any quit? Any man that looks at Goggins and goes, I can be that in its entirety. That's not how men,
Starting point is 00:46:53 how infantilizing to think that that's the way that men look at that person. As opposed to go, hey, when I'm going through a tough time, I'm gonna call on my inner Goggins. And when I'm going through an emotional time, I'm gonna call on my inner Seabum. I'm not gonna call on my inner Segins. And when I'm going through an emotional time, I'm going to call on my inner C bum.
Starting point is 00:47:06 I'm not going to call on my inner C bum and like get in touch with my emotions. If I'm going through a really, really rough workout or something like that, like it's all, I'm going to use the different tools that I have for the job. And, uh, yeah, there's, what was that Peterson quote about something about being cruel, you've got to learn to be cruel. Or you have to, you're weak if you're not able to be cruel or something. That's on the hit list as well, I'm afraid. Yeah, that's one of the blacklisted often.
Starting point is 00:47:28 It was, it's completely out of context. That's often quoted, but when you're talking about Goggins, et cetera, it reminds me of like some, the words of my mum, she'd always say everything in moderation. And like, if no one sat there just watching Goggins like their eyes like this for like several hours a day. And if you did, I'm sure that would be unhealthy. You're watching a bit of Goggins, you're watching a bit of Jordan Peterson. You're watching a bit of Chris Williamson, maybe watching a bit of me.
Starting point is 00:47:49 Like you're having everything in moderation. Like nothing on its own is good. And I wouldn't suggest just watching Goggins. Who do the powers that be in men's advocacy put forward as positive role models? I don't, I don't honestly, I do not know. I do not. I, this is a question we've, we had maybe a year ago, who are, who are the positive masculine role models for men?
Starting point is 00:48:14 And I don't know. I really didn't have an answer there. I have answers, but I'm not sure who they're supposed to be. Like, I think they, I think these, at least this certain type of advocacy really struggles to present a male role model, a healthy male role model, especially one that is masculine. And I'm still waiting for them to present one. Like, have you seen one?
Starting point is 00:48:32 Like, who are we supposed to look up to if not all these Manisfair men? The vacuum of any role models has left the gap that has been precisely filled by people that those, those supposedly providing us with role models say aren't role models. Right. Yeah. Like it's the, the issues that you have are laid at the feet of the vacuum. You know, I think very much the rise of the Manosphere and whatever version that is like the DJ and internet version of the Manosphere, the proper one.
Starting point is 00:49:04 I think that that largely was laid at the feet of Jordan, abandoning his conversation about boys and men. You know, he moved on to other things. He moved on to talking about political issues and religion and, and faith and stuff like that. And he'd opened up a market. There evidently was a market. He'd inspired a lot of people to have these sorts of conversations and it
Starting point is 00:49:22 showed proof of concept that you can be very popular by doing it, but he didn't continue servicing the market. So there was demand and no supply, which sucked in a lot of other people. Well, I think, I think Jordan probably gave up on that because he got so much backlash. Like he clearly cares a lot about men and boys and he must have been sick about being vilified for it. The same for like Warren Farrell, he could have been a really great role model and champion for men and boys.
Starting point is 00:49:48 No one really knows who he is, but he's a wonderful man, very thoughtful and sensitive, a lot like Jordan. And he was just, I guess, castigated. And I don't know, like, I can understand why Jordan would give up, I often feel like giving up too. And you're right that there is a massive lack of positive male role models, especially when you think about how many boys haven't got fathers at home and how few men there are in classrooms and how bad the role models are on TV, especially like sitcoms.
Starting point is 00:50:17 And people like Andrew Tate capitalized upon that. He just stepped into that vacuum because he does speak positively about masculinity, whether you like it or not, he does speak positively about men and boys and they just naturally gravitated towards it. I always like to think that- Who could have predicted? Well, I always like to think that his meteoric success, I think he was the fastest growing influencer in history, that massive success is exactly proportionate to our failure. That's how badly we've done. That's how big our failure has been. So if we need to stop pointing a finger at boys, calling them toxic
Starting point is 00:50:50 and misogynistic or oppressive and start pointing a finger at ourselves for not helping them, not talking to them, only ever talking about them, never talking to them, that's the real big problem. Like we always talk about boys, we always talk about men. We never talk to them. Like I actually spent last Friday on the streets of London just interviewing random men. And I'll tell you what, every single man I spoke to was fucked. In his own unique, horrible way. Like losing his children, addicted to alcohol, his parents are dying. Every single man was going through something horrific and yet the archetype of men as privileged just didn't just does not line up with my lived experiences. And I get DMs every day from these men, like really, really struggling, often with the issues that we talked about earlier.
Starting point is 00:51:35 And they're not being helped, and they're not even being seen, and they're actually being mocked a lot of the time. And those are the men that gravitate towards people like Andrew Tate, because we are not doing a good enough job, in my opinion. And so like I said, like instead of us fighting the Manosphere, like this ghost, let's start actually questioning, are we doing a good enough job? Can we do better? And can we bring these men and boys back? Because I think we can.
Starting point is 00:52:00 I think you already have. And I would, I mean, I would give you, I mean, you don't need any more money, but I would give you a lot more support. Like I would be I mean, I would give you, I mean, you don't need any more money, but I would give you a lot more support. Like I would be like, I'll be calling you every single day. If I was at Movember, like Chris, can I can, what's the secret source? Like you've got the secret source. For instance, one of the things that I rely on you for is stats. You know, I'm not balls deep in the data.
Starting point is 00:52:20 I don't know what the cutting edge, most recent most recent CDC, intimate partner violence stuff is saying. So I have to pick it up from your Instagram or DM you and you know, like, I feel like if you had a, if you really wanted to make an impact, you would have a big email chain or some big folder and Scott Galloway would have access and I would have access and you would have access and it would, everybody would be working collaboratively together. Um, and that's not to centralize me in this. I'm not hardly like the vanguard of like fixing this problem. My point being that when I look at important and successful social change
Starting point is 00:52:58 campaigns, they work with the people who are already on their side, but the incentives aligned to push people away. Human tribalism is so strong. If you make someone feel like an other, they will position themselves in opposition to you. And I think you're seeing that an awful lot. I relate so much to that. I feel othered so often. I feel let down, left behind, excluded, like shut out of the party so often.
Starting point is 00:53:25 And it's so difficult not, I have to take breaks, not because I struggle. I come not like really have energy, but I genuinely feel like alienated and I'm like, I don't want to become resentful. I don't want to become bitter. I need to step away for like two weeks and I'm on a break right now, for example. But tell me this, what does good advocacy for men look like and what does bad advocacy look like? Well, I mean, my, my particular brand of advocacy, I try not to get too caught up in subjective
Starting point is 00:53:50 conversations about masculinity and healthy masculinity and toxic masculinity. I think masculinity is, it just is, it's neither good nor bad. It just is. What I try to do, my own little part of the pie is just, as you said, presenting data in the most reliable way possible so we can have a conversation about men and women on a foundation of objective truth. And unfortunately, that truth is often unpopular and difficult to read. And it annoys me when people say I'm wrong about certain things.
Starting point is 00:54:20 Richard Reeves, for example, said on your podcast that the evidence I present on gender parity or domestic violence is wrong, completely wrong. And I'm like, it's not though. If you think I'm wrong, then you are also accusing the CDC of being wrong because that's all I'm showing you. I'm literally holding a mirror up. And if you don't like what's reflected back, that's just not my problem. That's just called science. So I would encourage those people who think I'm misleading people, such as Richard seems to, oh, why don't you send an email to the CDC
Starting point is 00:54:50 and accuse them of the same thing? And not just me, but like, the data for that particular claim is so overwhelming, we can no longer ignore it. I often like to quote Murray Strauss, because Murray Strauss, essentially the godfather of family violence research, quite literally set up the field itself, founded it. He designed the instruments we still use today. And he's presented hundreds of papers over three or four decades that show gender parity in partner violence between men and women in terms of
Starting point is 00:55:21 risk factors and victimization. And I'm like, you can't just ignore him. He is the most influential family violence researcher who's ever lived and he's presented hundreds of papers. And I'm like, that is uncomfortable. I'm sorry, but what more do you want me to show you? Like 400 papers, 500 papers? The biggest domestic violence database in the world, which has 1,700 papers, finds the same. The consensus finds it's not gendered. It's mostly bilateral.
Starting point is 00:55:50 And then actually, if you look at non-bilateral violence, it's usually women doing it, but it's certainly not gendered. And I'm so sick of being accused of misleading people when I'm simply just showing you the data. That's all I'm doing. What's the conflict tactics scale? Conflict. What is it? We talked earlier about how asking different questions in different ways can give you different results. So like you said, like one in three victims of abuse
Starting point is 00:56:16 in UK is male, but one in two in America is male and one in four in Australia is male. Those are all significant numbers, but you get different results depending on what you ask. So the CTS, the conflict tactic scale, which was designed by Murray Strauss, and that is the most, most widely used tool for studying domestic violence is basically a way of asking people about domestic violence. So back in the old days they would do surveys and they would call people up like, hi Chris, how many times have have you had a criminal charge or domestic violence or how many times does this happen? Like framing talk of domestic violence in a criminal language.
Starting point is 00:56:52 But a conflict tactics scale doesn't do that because people find that that use of criminalised language under represents the true form of domestic violence. But if you do the conflict tactics scale, which is just a series of questions that asks people how do you deal with conflict in your house, and through more benign questions about how do you handle a dispute, how do you handle an argument, what do you do if your wife or husband is disagreeing with you, then suddenly you find much larger numbers. If you take away the whole criminal aspect of it and just frame it in a more sort of benign, friendly way, you get gender parity first first of all and you find that rates go up by maybe
Starting point is 00:57:28 10 or 15 times. So like I said, it really depends on how you ask the question or how do you do you find abuse? And like similar, a lot of domestic violence data is based on criminal records for example. At Canada, they find one in three victims of abuse is man, but they use criminal data. And we know men are less likely to file a case of abuse and they're less likely to be helped by police. So they're underrepresented there too. So there's a huge margin of error. And I'm happy to say that. But even the lower estimates, one in four, one in three is still a significant amount. But yeah, the conflict tactic scale is basically a unique way of asking people about domestic violence in a way that's framed in a more relatable and accessible
Starting point is 00:58:12 manner outside of the criminal language previously used. I think it's a fairer measure of domestic violence and partner violence. And that's where the controversy begins. Cause like you said, it finds gender parity. Talk to me about this issue around a minister for men in the UK. I mean, the minister for men, well, our minister for men is a hypothetical position that doesn't exist that a lot of people are advocating for. I was asking for this in 2019 and people thought that was hilarious. A minister for men, but it's becoming increasingly popular.
Starting point is 00:58:43 It's been discussed in the mainstream. It was discussed a lot for Men. But it's becoming increasingly popular. It's been discussed in the mainstream. It was discussed a lot last year. I think there's a poll and just under 50% of the British public poll supported a Minister for Men. So it's growing. It's no longer a joke. Now it's becoming more popular. A Minister for Men would be a position just like the Minister for Women that looks into the various issues that I discuss. So male victims of abuse, sexual violence, boys being bullied, male homelessness, male drug addiction, of course, male suicide, family courts, for example, all these different things that are very unpopular.
Starting point is 00:59:17 But also extremely important, and a Minister for Men is a position that would exist but doesn't, that would look into them. Like, I mean, one of't, that would look into them. Like, I mean, one of the things that I'm often saying is that I am often surprised that I'm sat in this seat. I do not think I'm qualified to be here. I don't think I should be in this position at all, really.
Starting point is 00:59:37 Like, the person sat in this seat should be the Minister for Men. Someone that's more qualified, being paid, and supported. Like, some sort of politician or academic or professor, not me, but unfortunately I seem to be the best you've got. So a Minister for Men would be doing my job essentially and talking about all the things that I want to talk about and unafraid to do so. And I would love to see that happen. I think it will happen in the next few years.
Starting point is 01:00:05 It's growing in popularity and I think, and it obviously means for men and boys as well, let's be clear on that. There's a lot of issues around boys that need to be spoken about, like education. And, uh, yeah, I worry that, uh, given sort of what happens every time that this conversation breaks above the surface in that way, so to speak. Uh, it's just another person that annoys you or it's another group that annoys you. So I fear that whoever becomes minister for men will do whatever it is, sacrifice goat blood over the pentagram of the beak, nose mask people and, you know,
Starting point is 01:00:42 whatever, whatever they get indoctrinated into that you don't like. And, um, I think you have such a gold standard and you're very unwavering, you know, not needing to sort of kiss the ring of feminism. Every time you talk about the problems of boys and men, not wanting to sugar coat the communication, uh, because people have been so used to having that happen to them. And, um, it's such a, you're like the David Goggins of masculinity. Do you know what I mean? Like very unwavering in that regard. And, um, it's such a, you're like the David Goggins of masculinity. Do you know what I mean? Like very unwavering in that regard.
Starting point is 01:01:08 And, um, I wonder if anybody is ever going to be sufficiently pure to meet your, uh, to meet your standards. Yeah. I mean, I would not want it to be a sort of a symbolic position and someone that's browbeating sort of a number of apologies, oh, just want them to have courage and that's what I really want them to have courage. That's what I really want people to have, that courage to say what's unpopular and just to be driven by the ultimate ambition of stopping men from ending their lives. That's the dance we're all dancing
Starting point is 01:01:36 now. There are so many people talking about male suicide, encouraging men to talk, but so few people talking about the things that men are telling them. Like the experiences of abuse, experience of losing children, experience of addiction, you know, family breakdown, family courts, like no one is talking about them. So many men are talking about these things that are causing distress and pushing them towards suicide. And then the same people are telling men to talk and not talking themselves about what men are telling them. I'm fucking talking.
Starting point is 01:02:04 You need to talk. You need to talk, but not like about what men are telling them. Well, it's not talking about you. You need to talk. You need to talk, but not like that. Yeah. Not about those things. Yeah. Don't bring that up. Tell us, tell us that you get sad sometimes and that you wish that you could talk to your friends more about it.
Starting point is 01:02:14 Well, it reminds me of what happened to our friends, John Barry and Martin Seager, when they tried to set up the men's section of the British Psychological Society. So the BPS is like the sort of the national group of psychologists in the UK. psychological society. So the BPS is like the sort of the national group of psychologists in the UK, and they have different sections of research for minorities and gay people and women, of course, and Martin Seeger and John Barry wanted to set up a men's section in the BPS to look into things like male suicide, for example. There could not be a bigger priority, in my opinion, for the psychological industry in reducing suicide, especially male suicide. That seems to be an uncontroversial thing, except it wasn't. There was a massive backlash when they tried to set up the men's section to the point where the
Starting point is 01:02:53 BPS actually had a vote. They actually put it to their members to vote on should we set up a men's section and then one third of members voted against it. So one third of BPS members voted against a section being set up for the group most at risk to suicide. And it's like, I just don't understand that that could happen. And that's just a brand of advocacy I am not on board with. And that is just like a red line I won't cross. What do you, what do you wish that Movember would do more of? Or if you were to step into Zach's shoes for a little while, the guy that runs,
Starting point is 01:03:28 I'm sure it's not just him, it's like a million people. It's not just him. Um, like, but if you were to step into all of the people that run Movember's shoes, what would you, what would you do? I would be distributing that money. Like nobody's business. There are people like that desperate for that money, that 35 million pounds, just dishing
Starting point is 01:03:45 out straight away. I would then appoint a significant number of trustees who are based in the UK and are aware of British culture and European culture. And the idea that none of their trustees are even here is no good. So give the money back, spend the money, change the way it's governed. And then more broadly in terms of the philosophy, I'd be like, you need to be more courageous. You cannot be brow beaten behind the scenes
Starting point is 01:04:10 by women's organizations into dancing to their tune. You are here to help men and boys. And that is the first, second, third priority. And anything that gets into that in front of that, you need to confront with courage, like me. And like, I just... I would just remind them of their priorities. Like, the fact that they're talking about VORG is sort of like the canary in the mine to me. And it sounds like this November Institute is also going to be distributing their money on feminist frameworks.
Starting point is 01:04:41 Which, I don't... doesn't make sense. Like, you're here for men. Most men aren't feminists. Most women are feminists. You're not a political organization. You should be like, you should be helping people doing research and not, and not just playing this silly sort of political nitpicking and semantic wordplay. How powerful are Movember? How much do they control the narrative? Yeah, really powerful.
Starting point is 01:05:05 The most powerful men's health and male suicide charity on the planet. They are the ones that should be pushing back, not the ones that are just waving the flag or the white flag of surrender. Be like, no, I'm sorry, but men who are abused, that is a men's health issue and they need to be protected by us. We need to stand up for them. We need to actually do at least as much for male victims of abuse as we are doing for women and not buy into this political narrative of violence against women and
Starting point is 01:05:33 gendered violence, which actually erases the very men that they're obligated to help. And like, how much are they, how much are they shaping the narrative? Really? I don't know, because as soon as you kind of, as soon as you tumble into degenerate internet mode, you kind of forget what it's like to be a person that watches TV and does sort of the normal things. Uh, but I don't know how much the conversation around boys and men is
Starting point is 01:06:00 curated or crafted by Movember. Me neither. I think most people don't even realize they are an organization. People just think that it's a meme. And so many people have been like, hang on, there's an organization called Movember. I'm like, absolute yes, there are. But to answer your question, I don't think they have much resonance. I don't think their messaging really has much impact on men and boys.
Starting point is 01:06:22 I hate to boil it down to social media engagement, but if you look at their social media accounts, there's very little going on there. It doesn't seem to be reverberating the same way that your content is and to a lesser extent my content is. And I feel like they're just talking to the void. And because they've got so much money, and because people are afraid of saying what they really think to Movember because they have so much money, they're also getting a disproportionate sense of their own entitlement. They have a disproportionate sense that they are leading the conversation and they just
Starting point is 01:06:52 are not. They're just not. They have the money and people, like I said, like I know people that don't want to stand up to November. I've had loads of people contact me from within November and outside of November. What are they worried about? They have the money. They have all the money.
Starting point is 01:07:12 Like they have, like I cannot describe to you how little money there is in these different areas. I, I, I've been doing this for five years. I have not, I mean, I've received some money just from kind donors, but very little I've hemorrhaged money. Absolutely. How can you would not believe that how much money I've lost lost in this account. And that's fine. That's fine. That is a sacrifice I made, I knowingly made and I will continue to make for as long as possible. But there are people far, far worse than me, people doing absolutely seminal work into male suicide, especially, that are
Starting point is 01:07:38 literally got nothing. And the money they do have is money that I helped raise from my community and it's not my job. So those people do not want to stand up to Movember because Movember have the money. I have people like, just not say what they think or not do research they want to do because they're afraid and that is just not good science. So I would say just having the money in one place rather than distributing it more broadly is just a recipe for disaster. Would you sit down with someone from Movember, Zach or somebody else? Maybe we could do it on the show if someone's interested from the camp.
Starting point is 01:08:14 Yeah, I'm an open book. I recognize my limitations. Where were you most wrong? I think I have a lot of blind spots in the psychology. I try not to get into talking about different psychological models. I have not got a PhD. I have a bachelor of arts from a very middling university. So if we're going to talk about clinical psychology, you win. You win every day of the week.
Starting point is 01:08:42 What I do know is communications. That's where my expertise are, tone of voice, communications, how to present these difficult issues in a way that makes them palatable and resonant. I would say you have that skill too. So I clearly know how to get these messages out there to make them shareable. I've built a whole career. The reason why I can do this for free is because I built a whole career doing this within various different scientific fields because guess what? Academics are not great communicators and I've a whole career doing this within various different scientific fields. Cause guess what? Academics are not great communicators and I've made a career out of that. And now I've turned my skillset to this area of advocacy where it's desperately needed.
Starting point is 01:09:19 So I have a proven track record of making academia palatable and interesting. Sexy. Sexy, as sexy as it can be. And I am happy. I'm happy to lift up other academics. I wonder if, uh, I wonder if Richard, you and someone from Movember, uh, I wonder if we could get that as a round table. Cause I'd love to have that conversation and it's easy again, you know, even in this, I can feel the temptation to sort of tumble
Starting point is 01:09:40 toward some kind of them and us, the powers that be that have got the money and the young upstarts that have got the money and the young upstarts that did it themselves, doing the thing. Nothing would make me happier than to genuinely impact the conversation around boys and men, to actually make a real impact. Like bullying, childhood bullying to me. I got an invite to go to a very prestigious British school. Lots of people go and speak at these sorts of places because it's great for media, because there is this sort of reverse positive, some brand thing that you get where a person who's famous goes and speaks at somewhere that's famous
Starting point is 01:10:16 and everybody gets to win or whatever. And, uh, the first thing that came to mind was why do I need to go and speak to them? I can go, I can go to a primary school or a secondary school in Stockton on T's where I grew up, where I felt alone, where I was bullied throughout the entire time I was at school. And I can go and have a conversation with those kids because actually know their experiences. I don't know the experiences of someone that's paying 20 or 40 grand a year
Starting point is 01:10:38 to go and get, get their education to become a future politician. I don't know those people, but I know my people. So that bullying, like, I mean, let's, let's just linger on the bullying thing for a while, cause I know it's something that you've been working on a good bit. Bullying is a really important issue to me. Like both you and I have experienced the bullying and it destroys your life. Totally destroys your life at the earliest possible age. And it's a really good vessel through which to look at toxic masculinity or
Starting point is 01:11:04 just problematizing of men in two different ways. One way is to see bullying for example. Well let's look at things like violent fantasies for example. Violent fantasies in my opinion are massively correlated with experiences of bullying. There is a huge amount of research that finds that boys who are bullied, especially the most bullied boys, almost all of them, 97% of them will go on to have violent fantasies later in life. So now you have a man who's having a violent fantasy. Some people will see that man as toxic. A man having a violent fantasy is seen as toxic, needing a correction or needing some sort of healthy masculinity
Starting point is 01:11:39 workshop. I don't see that. I see a bullied boy that's grown up and a bullied boy develops violent fantasies as a means of coping with violence to come. That's literally what a violent fantasy is. It's a coping mechanism because that boy is basically fantasizing about violence so he can deal with more violence. So suddenly that violent man is no longer sort of a toxic perpetrator, but he's just a bully boy that's grown up and he is deserving of sympathy. And I just think in that case men who have violent fantasies, we need to see them as victims in their own right, deserving of sympathy and support, not condemnation. And yeah, bullying is one of the root causes of that. And if you want to solve so-called toxic masculinity,
Starting point is 01:12:22 in this case, violent fantasies, then you need to look at bullying. You need to hold accountable schools that allow bullying, which in my opinion is institutionalised abuse of children. And unless you're going to talk about schools and what you're doing for bullying, you're going to need to support boys who are being bullied and you need to look at the long-term impacts, especially in violent fantasies. Those are the things you need to talk about going on about toxic masculinity. You're sort of, it's, it's too late. It's too late.
Starting point is 01:12:51 You need to get to the problem a lot sooner than that. Well, it's, it's nowhere near as sexy though. Right. Because it's much easier to say this man with his overly aggressive approach to life is that they are the problem. There's something in them, or if it's not in them, it's in the expectations around them, because at no point does that lay at the feet. Of the person, somebody else who is to blame something that's not systemic.
Starting point is 01:13:16 That's like sexy, but something which, something which can be fixed, which is if only he was made to feel like he needed to be less masculine, everything would be fine because you can't go back and un-bully him. You can't go back to school and un-bully you or un-bully me. That's not going to happen. But yeah, I've got a couple of different people that I've had on the show with evidence-based interventions for bullying. Dr. Tracy Vying-Kor is the head of anti-bullying in Canada.
Starting point is 01:13:48 Uh, and I've got a couple of other episodes, Tony Valks as well. Um, so I'm going to do a lot of work on this next year. Hopefully I'm going to get to go and speak in some schools and stuff like that. Uh, and, and. Pump money into those. If I, I mean, you asked me, what would I do if I had November money? I'll just pump money into that. I would just be throwing money at those. I did interview Don Dutton recently who is in my opinion, now
Starting point is 01:14:07 Maurice Strauss has passed away. He is the leading expert in the world and domestic violence. I asked him, what would you do? So I'll give you his answer. Uh, and he said, I would spend as much money as possible making a child's life in the first two years of life, especially as comfortable as possible. I'd be supporting parents, both mothers and fathers to make sure that child is living a comfortable life.
Starting point is 01:14:28 And he's like, that would be expensive, but that will, you'll, you'll get that back long-term, that is a massive investment that will pay off. Because you've, you've neutered a ton of dysregulated parasympathetic and sympathetic balances. Yeah. Closed down half of prisons perhaps. Um, and then second, he's like, I would not indulge in this gendered violence model of deprogramming violence men.
Starting point is 01:14:49 I would, I would, I would look more at sort of couples therapy, but you're treating both sides of the coin. So I would do that. I would do more couples therapy and I would definitely do a lot more to support parents and children early in life. Like, I mean, I, I talk a lot about spanking children and how damaging that is long-term, for example, because it basically teaches children that they can solve misbehaviour
Starting point is 01:15:11 through violence. I saw some research that came out recently, Rob Henderson shared it, which you may have seen as well, pushing back against the damaging nature of, I think it was a meta-analysis, saying that the physical interventions for disciplining kids isn't as damaging as previously thought. Well, there's a lot of evidence that it doesn't work long-term, but I mean, I would love to read that research
Starting point is 01:15:35 because it means intuitively, it makes a lot of sense that if you're a child is very formative age, if you're saying that if you don't like behavior, you are able to enact violence on that person, that is essentially what partner abuse is. That you don't like what your partner's doing so you can hit them if you don't like them. That's basically what you're teaching children, that if they misbehave, I can be violent towards them. I often say that and no doubt people are going to be writing comments now, well you don't
Starting point is 01:15:59 have children George, you don't know what you're talking about and guess what, I know I don't. That's why I feel like we should be doing more to support parents so they don't have to resort to violence. And I mean, I would love to read that research. I doesn't, it's not research I've read, but I mean, if I were to quote Maurice Strauss, who is the expert, he said spanking children is the most prevalent yet most ignored cause of partner violence later in life.
Starting point is 01:16:21 So. Wow. It's hard. Yeah. cause of partner violence later in life. So, wow. It's hard. So it's your, it's your belief that there is a expectation, something unpleasant in an intimate relationship, parent, child, husband, wife, something occurs and one of the acceptable ways to deal with that is with physical violence because that's what happened to you when you were a kid. Therefore that's what you can do as you grow up in later life.
Starting point is 01:16:45 Yeah. Well, I mean, I, my parents have tried their best to reason and talk to me and negotiate. And I little did they know how unreasonable you were. Well, I, I tried to be, I tried to do that now. If I disagree with someone, I'll sit them down and I'll talk to them. I don't resort to violence. I'm not a violent person. I think part of that's because that's the model I was shown growing up that my parents weren't
Starting point is 01:17:03 violent towards me, but if they had my parents weren't violent towards me. But if they had, had they been violent towards me, that would have increased the chance that I would then use that same model in people in my life. And I guess the point I'm trying to make is that instead of indulging, spending so much money on like, Vogue strategies, which no one really knows what that is, we should be doing it on things that we do know what they are, like spanking children, which is an objective thing that we can all talk about. I've never seen spanking children mentioned in a single domestic violence campaign.
Starting point is 01:17:28 And yet, at least according to Maurice Strauss, it's the most prevalent cause of domestic violence. So I'd be throwing money into that as well, to be honest, and bullying. You're a man from the left and a pro-male advocate. What were your thoughts on white guys for Harris as a campaign? I mean, I don't, what is, what is, what is that? That sounds- You didn't see white guys for Harris?
Starting point is 01:17:50 I don't mean, no, but I mean, educate me. Okay. So white guys for Harris was a 30,000 person zoom call that happened, uh, where, as you can imagine, I mean, Scott Galloway spoke briefly. Uh, I think, uh, maybe Reid Hoffman did as well. I imagine that Mark Cuban was on there. It's a, it was, it was interesting hearing a bunch of what to me amounted to a pretty obvious struggle session talking about how we need to recognize
Starting point is 01:18:22 our dot dot dot, and we must be aware of our dot dot dot. And it is, it is apparent that we must et cetera, et cetera. Um, and I'm like, Hey, if you're having this conversation with potentially the future president of the United States, maybe you should use this opportunity to try and speak up for the group that you're supposed to represent, which is in the title of the zoom call, which you've joined, but it was very much, we understand that we come from a position of blah, blah. I just thought this is fucking lame.
Starting point is 01:18:53 Like this sucks at no, at no point, at no point does it present a hopeful or positive expectation for the people that you're supposed to be resonating with. It just sounds like I'm going to have my head, it's the equivalent of being dunked in the toilet over and over again. Yeah. I mean, I'm not surprised there's these virtuous shows of men supporting Kamala Harris. I think the bigger picture is a lot of men, young men, especially on the left, such as myself,
Starting point is 01:19:26 feel totally alienated from politics. There's no one talking about. Oh, I've just got, sorry, no, I've just checked. White Dudes for Harris, I called it White Guys, shows how much of an impact it had on me. White Dudes for Harris is a group of voters that supports the 2024 presidential candidate. Ross Morales-Rochetto and Mike Nellis have been credited as the
Starting point is 01:19:46 group's organizers July, 2024, a fundraiser with approximately 190,000 participants raised more than $4 million. Oh, I mean, I'm less interested in what white men can do for Kamala Harris. And I'm more interested in what any president can do for men as a group in America, like that's, that's the way around. I want to see it. And I would like to remind whoever that president is that men are more likely to die at every age, boys are behind at every stage of education, men die more in 13 of the top 15 causes of death and
Starting point is 01:20:17 are behind women in health outcomes across every single racial, economic, and ethnic group. So I'm more interested in what can the president do for men. And there are many more issues besides that. I mean, I don't care about these virtuous signs of submission, it seems. I mean, I think there's far more men that are totally inalienated from politics, such as myself. And I just wish politicians would write policy for them, like, administer for men or any office for men's health in America would be policy for them, like Minister for men or like any office for men's health in America would be nice. Like men's health in America is dreadful, just as bad as it is here. Same deal, there's no sort of federal office for men's health and there's about eight for women
Starting point is 01:20:56 and none for men. So I'm more interested in how do we help men rather than how can men help Kamala Harris or whoever's going to get into White House. men, rather than how can men help Kamala Harris or whoever's going to get into what else? What do you think the future of, or the next couple of years for men's advocacy has got in store? I mean, really, I mean, like I said, I feel like we're at crossroads now and like I'm here obviously to make some criticisms to certain organisations, but I'm also here to listen, like my inbox is open. I would like that question for that to be a positive one where we can work together individuals like yourself and me and work with people in politics and academia to
Starting point is 01:21:35 put our best foot forwards on this, on, on the same side, like to work together. And there were just things I will not do. There were things that were red lines I will not cross. And I will not, I will not treat domestic violence through a valk framework. I will not distribute funds underneath a feminist framework. And I will not support any organization that does not openly support a minister for men. Those are the red lines I have. If you can actually work with me within those lines, then I would absolutely love to help.
Starting point is 01:22:03 So I would love to say in five years, the problems that we're talking about in terms of education being so poor, men's health being so bad, perhaps most of all suicide being an epidemic, I would love that to be less bad, improved because we've actually taken meaningful political action and we've actually put our money where our mouth is and work together to feature a solution. So, I mean, I, I want to solve his problems and I want to work together. I mean, I'm only one side of that. I would like that too. I would like that too.
Starting point is 01:22:33 And in whatever way I can help, I, uh, I'll be trying to facilitate George. I appreciate you, man. Where should people go? Don't want to keep up to date with all of the things that you're doing. Well, I mean, I'm expanding to my own podcast now, so I'm starting to interview different people in this space on YouTube. So the Tin Men on YouTube, but still Instagram, the Tin Men. And I'm expanding, expanding out now, but yeah, the Tin Men on Instagram.
Starting point is 01:22:54 It's where you can find me. Okay. I appreciate you, man. Thank you.

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