Lethbridge Herald

Vanattackp­utsspotlig­hton‘IncelRebel­lion’

- Adina Bresge THE CANADIAN PRESS — TORONTO

A message allegedly posted by the accused in Toronto’s deadly van attack is shedding light on a mostly male online community that an expert says endorses violent rhetoric against women.

Police have said they are looking into a “cryptic” message posted on Alek Minassian’s Facebook profile minutes before pedestrian­s were mowed down on a northern stretch of Yonge Street.

Facebook has said it deleted the account associated with the widely circulated post, which refers to involuntar­y celibacy, often shortened to “incel.”

“The Incel Rebellion has already begun!” the post declared.

Ryan Duquette, of the Toronto-based digital forensics consulting firm Hexigent, said it’s not clear who accessed the account when the message was posted based on the informatio­n that’s publicly available.

Duquette, a former police officer, said investigat­ors are likely working to verify the post’s origins by analyzing the device used to access the account, location data and the suspect’s online history.

Both Facebook and police declined to provide more informatio­n about the post.

Debbie Ging, an associate professor at Dublin City University studying gender and social media, said the incels are part of a loose confederac­y of male-dominated online subculture­s known as the “manosphere,” which espouse a range of visions of modern masculinit­y, often defined in opposition to feminism.

Incels are characteri­zed by their inability to find sexual partners, which is often intertwine­d with resentment towards women, whom they see as “geneticall­y hard-wired gold diggers,” Ging said.

“Involuntar­y celibates ... see themselves as men who are denied sex by women, so implicit in that claim is a sense of entitlemen­t to sex that they feel they’re being denied,” she said.

Ging said the Facebook post used terminolog­y common to incel forums, such as references to “Chads” and Stacys,” the respective male and female archetypes of the sexually active masses whom incels blame for their sexual rejection.

The post also praises Elliot Rodger, a 22-yearold man who killed six people and then himself at the University of California in 2014, calling him a “Supreme Gentleman.”

The moniker is widely used to describe Rodger within the incel community, Ging said, where he is lauded as “kind of a hero” because he “acted on his ideology and took revenge.”

The post’s warning of an “Incel Rebellion” echoes violent language spread on incel forums, most of which Ging ascribes to “venting,” but said for a small subset of the community, threatens to “tip over into reality.”

“I think it has to be taken seriously as a kind of political entity,” she said. “This virulent and vitriolic anti-feminism is part of a significan­t reaction, and we have to see it as such and deal with it as such.”

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