"They're incels. They've posted on their social media accounts explaining that they haven't been able to find someone to date, someone to be intimate with. They have created this echo chamber of violence against women.
So instead of dealing with the individuals vile acts, the BBC decided they would exploit it into an agenda to paint a whole group of men as a dangerous threat to women.
Annie, who works as a translator, says she wants to drive awareness of male violence towards women.
Yes, they are actively trying to push the idea that being unattractive is "male violence towards women".
Modern day "journalism" which should be more accurately described as activism.
It wasn't even ever a movement. It was a subreddit that dared to exist on Reddit, where women also exist and thereby feel "unsafe" that those gross types are allowed to speak one click away from them.
Like, its an oft forgotten piece of this little cultural history that it was literally memed into being this big "thing" by people all across Reddit whining endlessly about the incel board being allowed to exist and speak, with them constantly posting everything there around as a "LOOK AT THIS STUPID/EVIL THING" freakshow.
Then there was that one shooter who was assigned the label "incel" (not Elliot Rodger, that was years earlier, a canadian one I believe) and suddenly every news media was using the word and now its the boogeyman for the Left and Women second only to Trump.
And now any man who complains about women is an incel, because sexist/misogynist lost its flair a decade ago, to the point where it doesn't even make sense how an involuntary celibate is somehow a married father of many.
It existed for a while, that's one of the reasons why everyone got so testy and pissy and all the various SRS types would post about it daily asking why it wasn't banned. It had a decent history before being noticed, and then was able to limp for some time.
And then yeah it got banned, which I'm sure just made all those guys instantly go improve their lives and stop hatin'.