I was an undercover incel – they’re grooming and radicalising our kids and feeding them lies about rape
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WHEN people hear about incels, they often react with sympathy. Shouldn’t we just feel sorry for these losers, these lonely men, they ask?
But this isn’t a small group of sad men including Plymouth shooter Jake Davison, with a few fringe members who have more violent ideas. This is a community centrally focused on reducing women to sex objects.
We shouldn’t underestimate the size of these groups.
While researching incel websites and forums for my book Men Who Hate Women, I focused on four major sites, each with around 10,000 members and some with millions of posts.
I watched the numbers swell by around 25 per cent in a year. One now has just under 14,000 members.
But this doesn’t take into account the number of people consuming the content without actually becoming members.
For example, when I visit one website, the stat counters show that there are around 1,000 members online, but also just over 1,000 non-members viewing the site.
I would estimate that the number of people around the world subscribing to this ideology is over 100,000, but it is difficult to pinpoint exactly how many of these are in the UK.
Teen boys repeat woman-hating slogans
Certainly a lot of individual members make references to the UK in their posts.
And we have recently seen incel ideology mentioned in two legal cases in the UK where people have gone on to be convicted of terror-related crimes, though the incel ideology was not proven to be their primary motivation.
Anwar Driouich, 22, from Middlesbrough, was sentenced to 20 months in jail last year after he admitted possessing 10kg of an explosive substance and a hoard of weapons, including a crossbow, to carry out a massacre.
, 22, was jailed for 10 years for offences under the terrorism after he armed himself with a high-powered crossbow and a foot-long machete in 2019.
But it’s not only people who would identify themselves as incels we need to be worried about.
It is very deliberate grooming and radicalisation. And often it leads on to other forms of extremism, like white supremacy
Laura Bates
In my work on gender equality with young people in schools, I regularly meet teenage boys who are repeating extremist, women-hating slogans and fake statistics.
They claim that women lie about rape to ruin men’s lives, that men everywhere are losing their jobs to less qualified women because of feminism gone mad, that men are by far the biggest category of domestic abuse victims.
They say things like “rape is a compliment really” and “it’s not rape if she enjoys it.”
These boys wouldn’t necessarily describe themselves as incels or even have heard the term.
And it is important to say that we’re not talking about all teenage boys: lots of them are furious at these ideas and bravely fighting back.
But a significant number of them are coming into contact with misogynist extremism on social media posts, viral anti-feminist memes and YouTube videos with millions of views.
The risk is that these ideas are spreading, and radicalising young people.
Rise in school sexual assaults
Can it be a coincidence that a recent Ofsted report found 80 per cent of girls at school in the UK had been sexually harassed and 79% sexually assaulted?
When boys at one school showed me the Instagram meme accounts they were following, they contained jokes and excuses for rape and domestic violence, and arguments that uppity feminists should be put back in their place… with a well-aimed fist.
This online content creates a sort of rabbit hole that children are gradually drawn down over time.
The online extremists refer to this process of using videos and cultural references to draw young people in as “adding cherry flavour to children’s medicine.”
It is very deliberate grooming and radicalisation. And often it leads on to other forms of extremism, like white supremacy.
The problem is that because we don’t describe these groups as extremists or call it terrorism when men steeped in these woman-hating ideologies commit massacres, we aren’t able to tackle them effectively.
The origins of the incel movement
IN the mid-1990s, long before the arrival of dating apps, Facebook, or even MySpace, a lonely young woman named Alana had a simple idea.
Alana felt sad about not being able to find love and wanted to set up a supportive online community where people in a similar situation could support each other.
The community she called ‘invcels’ (for involuntary celibates) started out as a welcoming, mixed-gender space.
But years later, after Alana herself had entered a relationship and drifted away from it altogether, it would slowly begin to morph into something much darker.
Over 15 years later, in a bookshop in Toronto, Alana was browsing a magazine in a bookshop when an article about a massacre by an ‘incel’ in California caught her eye.
Elliot Rodger had murdered 6 people and injured 14 in a rampage in Santa Barbara after promising to take revenge on what he described as “the ultimate evil... the human female”.
And with a lurch of horror, she realised what the simple community she had started had become.
“Start envisioning a world where WOMEN FEAR YOU”, Rodger had written on a prominent incel website.
With the advent of easier internet access, social media platforms and algorithms, what had started as a simple, supportive community had transformed into a woman-hating, extremist ideology.
Elliot Rodger was not described as a terrorist, for example, by police or the media.
Most parents have never heard of incels. Teachers aren’t trained and resourced to look out for red flags of boys being groomed or radicalised in the same way they are with other forms of extremism.
And many counter-terror organisations aren’t tracking them in the same way as other groups.
Until we start describing this problem accurately and taking it seriously, there’s a real risk it will continue to grow.
Even this morning, men on these forums are openly celebrating the bloodshed in Plymouth and talking about planning future attacks.
We won’t be able to stop them unless we recognise them as a form of terrorism like any other.
Signs parents should watch out for
1) Familiarise yourself with the online landscape – have a look at some of the anti-feminist Reddit pages, search for ‘redpill’ content on YouTube and follow some of the big Instagram comedy meme accounts to give yourself a sense of what young people are consuming.
2) Look out for red flags: words like ‘triggered’, ‘cucked’, ‘based’, ‘normies’, ‘Chads’, ‘foid’, ‘redpill’ or ‘blackpill’ are all good examples.
3) Be aware that incels don’t just use incel forums to recruit young people, they are very active on bodybuilding forums, on social media and on gaming websites and chatrooms, including online multiplayer games where they can talk to people they don’t know over headsets.
4) Look out for misogynistic beliefs like anger at feminism, talking about the gender pay gap being a ‘myth’ or a focus on false rape allegations.
5) Sudden intolerance to alternative viewpoints or discussion can be a red flag for extremism.
6) Don’t be afraid to ask for help: reach out to your child’s school, ask if they are aware of these issues and what they are doing to tackle them.
7) Have open, honest conversations where boys don’t feel attacked or judged but can ask about things they might feel anxious or confused about.
8) Encourage young people to be critical about online sources and think about the fact that they might be biased and statistics they see on a forum might not be accurate.
9) Encourage boys to have positive, non-sexualised friendships with girls from a young age (don’t shame them for this, or tease them about it).