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posted 4 years ago by TheImpossible1 4 years ago by TheImpossible1 +41 / -0
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▲ 33 ▼
– GeneralBoobs 33 points 4 years ago +33 / -0

The disenfranchisement of the teen male and lack of a strong, guiding male figure often leads to depression and other mental health problems. This is often why gangs form.

It's a very complicated thing.

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▲ 17 ▼
– cccpneveragain 17 points 4 years ago +17 / -0

That would be my answer too. It's appalling how many boys grow up without a father or a grandfather, uncle, etc. that they even see or pays any attention to them. I don't know what I'd be today without those influences in my life, but I'm pretty sure it would not be good.

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▲ 8 ▼
– yvaN_ehT_nioJ 8 points 4 years ago +8 / -0

I grew up without a dad and it's a damn miracle I even got to college, let alone graduated it. Took a fucking epiphany to get myself in gear because I'd be going nowhere fast otherwise.

Went to a poorer school growing up so mine wasn't the only situation. One guy I knew is almost 30 and last I checked (which granted was over 6 or 7 years ago) became a soyboy working a dead-end job at some comic shop creeping on girls. Another was a year behind me and is still bussing tables at the bar his mom works at. Another got taken out of his mom's custody (pill popping cluster-B crazy) and put with his grandmother. He's, doing ooookay. Makes decent money working with Amazon atm but there was a lot of aimlessness in the years between.

Kind of amazed I didn't get into hard drugs and wind up dead, now that I think about it. I have a half-sister and she wasn't so lucky, she got into alcohol and crippled herself for life drunk-driving. That was about 20 years ago now so she's doing pretty great! I think we're both outliers in the single-mom situation though.

The broken-home issue is a big killer and it's the one common factor between so many problems that's just completely ignored.

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▲ 3 ▼
– cccpneveragain 3 points 4 years ago +3 / -0

It's really sad overall. Just my personal sample size every single guy I've kept up with or heard about that I knew growing up that turned into a drug addict, deadbeat, whatever you want to call it every single one of them grew up in a broken house. I think it's part of the reason I make a point of spending time with my nephews/cousin who's like a nephew is even though they have good dads I want them to have a guy around if things ever turn to shit in that respect.

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▲ 2 ▼
– yvaN_ehT_nioJ 2 points 4 years ago +2 / -0

It's so important. Especially as it has knock-on effects that could potentially span generations. That "drug addict" or "deadbeat" has a much greater chance of divorce if they do get married so they can very well just repeat the cycle. Heck, I'm doing relatively ok and I know I'll have a much greater chance of that, and if I have kids then it'll be the same for them if that happens.

Just watch the rates of crime, mental illness, etc. really start to kick up for whites in the next few decades as more and more of them grow up in broken homes. It's already starting to happen. We've been seeing it with blacks for the last 40 years and I think it's only a matter of time before the issues they're dealing with became something all the different groups deal with en masse when the family-unit really starts to die out.

Is this talked about? No, of course not. Just even acknowledging the problem would require a hard look at all of the "progress" made since the 1960s.

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▲ 5 ▼
– cartoonericroberts 5 points 4 years ago +5 / -0

And SSRIs.

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▲ 11 ▼
– SleepyWhore 11 points 4 years ago +11 / -0

One thing I completely agree with you on. Women teachers are absolute cancer for adolescent boys. If boys are not involved in AT LEAST one masculine extracurricular these days they are fucked, because every other authority figure is a woman.

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▲ 2 ▼
– KeeperOfTheGate 2 points 4 years ago +2 / -0

When I was in elementary school, there was ONE male teacher in the entire school. This was mostly in the 80s.

My kids' school has 1 male K teacher (an amazing teacher. he brought in real hand saws, lumber, real hammers, nails, etc, and let the kids use them to build crap), 1 male 2nd teacher, 2 male 4th teachers, 2 male 5th teachers. Progress.

I am STRONGLY in favor of involving men in elementary education.

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▲ 3 ▼
– deleted 3 points 4 years ago +3 / -0
▲ 4 ▼
– TheRealLiszt 4 points 4 years ago +4 / -0

Another point to consider, the Department of Education was created by Carter in 1979. After its creation US test scores relative to the rest of the world started to plummet.

Amazing how a government program designed on the surface to do one thing, ended up accomplishing the exact opposite. I'm stunned.

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▲ 24 ▼
– deleted 24 points 4 years ago +24 / -0
▲ 14 ▼
– AnotherSchwarzesMark 14 points 4 years ago +14 / -0

The whole educational sector being tailored to and by women is one huge factor I'd mention as well. Boys being pushed into medication because they cannot sit still like the girls can, boys being repremanded for not being like girls when it comes to studying and the whole curriculum being more theoretical instead of practical is what is failing boys in education.

People who fail in education will fail in their future career which in turn will lead to future issues like unemployment, depression, violence, suicide. But don't you dare point that out. Some of your takes I don't wholeheartedly agree but in education you've got 100% my backing: less feminists, more men in education and personally I'd go further and rework how our current education systems are implemented.

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▲ 5 ▼
– deleted 5 points 4 years ago +5 / -0

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