• AltMaarri [they/them]@hexbear.net
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    vor 16 Stunden

    Maybe this; I quote (I’m assuming I don’t need to CW given the whole thread is but I’ll edit if I’m wrong):

    Computer-assisted self-interviews were completed with a random sample of 163 unmarried Caucasian and African American men in a large metropolitan area. Almost a quarter (24.5%) of these men acknowledged committing an act since the age of 14 that met standard legal definitions of attempted or completedremoved; an additional 39% had committed another type of sexual assault involving forced sexual contact or verbal coercion

    Then again it might be this (depressing I found two candidate studies immediately with a single shitty search):

    In college and community samples, rates of self-reportedremoved perpetration range from 6% to 15%, and rates of sexual assault perpetration range from 22% to 57%

    I didn’t look at either in depth / their methodology; but I wouldn’t be surprised. I am a man and I can count on the fingers of a single hand the amount of men I’ve known in my life that didn’t feel comfortable saying objectifying stuff about women when there were none around.

    • TranscendentalEmpire@lemmy.today
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      Thanks for posting, I got busy at work. You are correct, congratulations! Your prize is the burden of knowledge concerning our fellow man.

      There were a couple more, but those were the main two I was remembering off the top of my head.

    • Acute_Engles [he/him, any]@hexbear.net
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      vor 16 Stunden

      . I am a man and I can count on the fingers of a single hand the amount of men I’ve known in my life that didn’t feel comfortable saying objectifying stuff about women when there were none around

      So true and honestly why i never found myself on the #notallmen train because it felt like it was all men but me

      • TranscendentalEmpire@lemmy.today
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        vor 14 Stunden

        notallmen train because it felt like it was all men but me

        That’s why I quit teamed sports and having male friends. Have you also been diagnosed with high functioning autism? I think it helps insulate my brain from the gender identity crisis most dudes have gone through recently. Like a thin reflective mylar blanket my autism protects my mind from the joe rogan brain disease particles.

        • Acute_Engles [he/him, any]@hexbear.net
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          vor 11 Stunden

          I actually consistently score the lowest of anyone i’ve ever met, including ‘neurotypicals,’ on all publicly available autism and masking tests. I’ve never thought that I’m not a guy but I have felt like I wasn’t meant to live on this planet, certainly.

      • TranscendentalEmpire@lemmy.today
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        vor 14 Stunden

        Yeah… I don’t blame you. I’m a pretty traditionally masc dude and I don’t have any male friends anymore. The fucking manosphere bullshit has really made dudes loose what little sense of reality they still possessed. I think having a little more than a touch of the ism might have made me immune?

        My last and longest held male friend ended up transitioning, so now I primarily hang with trans people and a bunch of lesbians from my job.

        • woodenghost [comrade/them]@hexbear.net
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          vor 13 Stunden

          I totally get it. There’s one (somewhat gender non-conforming) man in my close friend group. There used to be another, but they came out as genderfluid non-binary. I think even if cis men (or people with strong life long privilege because of how they are perceived as men within patriarchy) reject patriarchy, they still have a responsibility to put work into relationships with other cis men. Even if it’s easier to just hang with non-male friends. Someone has to do the work of educating them and why should the main victims of patriarchy have to do it instead of the ones who suffer least from it and benefit the most? Also, I knew multiple cis men (no longer friends), who strongly preferred friendships with women because they enjoyed how their female friends actually had taken time to learn the social skills necessary for a good friendship (like talking about emotions). They let them do all this emotional labor, without ever putting anything in themselves. And without ever trying to change what male friendships could mean. They had male friendships, but would only really open up and be vulnerable to women. If men isolate themselves from other men, men won’t change. They need to take a risk and be vulnerable with other men.

          • TranscendentalEmpire@lemmy.today
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            vor 12 Stunden

            they still have a responsibility to put work into relationships with other cis men. Even if it’s easier to just hang with non-male friends. Someone has to do the work of educating them and why should the main victims of patriarchy have to do it instead of the ones who suffer least from it and benefit the most?

            I’ve definitely done my best to educate other cis men, ends up they typically really don’t like that. I’m getting old enough where I just don’t know very many young men, and a lot of my previous cis men friends my age just became self destructive at some point and went no contact or have killed themselves.

            They let them do all this emotional labor, without ever putting anything in themselves. And without ever trying to change what male friendships could mean

            Yeah, that is my experience with most relationships with my fellow cis male counterparts. Like, I can only talk about sports or videogames for so long before I start not feeling like a real person anymore. I never really understood friendships where it was taboo to talk about your experience with the human condition.

            If men isolate themselves from other men, men won’t change.

            I’ve kinda lost faith that this will happen anytime soon. Anytime I try to talk with other men about real emotions and life they either retreat from engagement, or end up being gender fluid.

            • woodenghost [comrade/them]@hexbear.net
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              vor 11 Stunden

              Yeah, I totally understand and relate with all your points. I didn’t mean to direct this at you anymore than at myself. It’s not easy. But it gives me hope, that more and more people come out as genderfluid, trans and/or nonbinary. Especially younger people often amaze me.

              Do you perhaps already know bell hooks book “The Will to Change - Man, Masculinity and Love”? It really inspired me to reflect on my upbringing and my relationships. And last time I checked, there was a free audiobook on YouTube.

              • TranscendentalEmpire@lemmy.today
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                didn’t mean to direct this at you anymore than at myself.

                No worries, I didn’t take it that way. I totally agree, sometimes it just feels like leading a dehydrated horse to water and instead of drinking they eat a bunch of sand.

                Do you perhaps already know bell hooks book “The Will to Change - Man, Masculinity and Love”?

                Yeah i read it a long time ago in college. It was kinda a surprise how much of a revelation it was for a lot of guys. To me expressing your feelings and being intimate with friends always seemed to be natural. However, I am part of a non western immigrant family. So maybe I just didn’t get a lot of baggage that is innate to American/western culture.

                • woodenghost [comrade/them]@hexbear.net
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                  vor 2 Stunden

                  I am part of a non western immigrant family. So maybe I just didn’t get a lot of baggage that is innate to American/western culture.

                  Me too, but on my family, the baggage of civil war and early loss left some marks.