AP: Emboldened 'manosphere' accelerates threats and demeaning language toward women after US election [View all]
AP - Emboldened manosphere accelerates threats and demeaning language toward women after US election
By CHRISTINE FERNANDO
Updated 12:06 AM EST, November 30, 2024
CHICAGO (AP) In the days after the presidential election, Sadie Perez began carrying pepper spray with her around campus. Her mom also ordered her and her sister a self-defense kit that included keychain spikes, a hidden knife key and a personal alarm.
Its a response to an emboldened fringe of right-wing manosphere influencers who have seized on Republican Donald Trump s presidential win to justify and amplify misogynistic derision and threats online. Many have appropriated a 1960s abortion rights rallying cry, declaring Your body, my choice at women online and on college campuses.
For many women, the words represent a worrying harbinger of what might lie ahead as some men perceive the election results as a rebuke of reproductive rights and womens rights.
The fact that I feel like I have to carry around pepper spray like this is sad, said Perez, a 19-year-old political science student in Wisconsin. Women want and deserve to feel safe.
Isabelle Frances-Wright, director of technology and society at the Institute for Strategic Dialogue, a think tank focusing on polarization and extremism, said she had seen a very large uptick in a number of types of misogynistic rhetoric immediately after the election, including some extremely violent misogyny.
I think many progressive women have been shocked by how quickly and aggressively this rhetoric has gained traction, she said.
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