Chattanooga Times Free Press

Van attack throws spotlight on anti-woman vitriol

-

TORONTO — The deadly van rampage in Toronto is training attention on an online world of sexual loneliness, rage and misogyny after the suspect invoked an uprising by “involuntar­y celibates” and gave a shout-out to a California killer who seethed at women for rejecting him.

The world of selfdescri­bed “incels,” where sexual frustratio­ns boil over into talk of violent revenge against women, has become a virtual home for some socially isolated men such as the 25-year-old computer science student charged in Monday’s carnage on Toronto’s busiest thoroughfa­re.

Minutes before plowing a rented van into a crowd of mostly women, killing 10 people and injuring 14, suspect Alek Minassian posted a Facebook message that seemed to offer one of the few clues so far to what was on his mind. “The Incel Rebellion has already begun!” it read. Police confirmed Minassian posted the message but have declined so far to discuss a motive for the attack as they continue investigat­ing. But the post has revived concerns about the anti-woman vitriol embraced by California mass killer Elliot Rodger and invoked by Minassian in his post.

Incel forums and sites are “one of the most violent areas of the internet,” said Heidi Beirich, who tracks hate groups for the Southern Poverty Law Center. “It may seem to some people that this is kind of a group of pathetic, victimized white males who just are lonely. It’s not. It’s ugly.”

Yet some incel sites insist they don’t condone violence or misogyny. And Judith Taylor, a University of Toronto professor who focuses on social movements, notes that some participan­ts in incel discussion­s simply feel forsaken, while others “can become very graphic and very toxic.”

Until Monday, Minassian had a life that never attracted authoritie­s’ attention.

Living with his family in suburban Toronto, he studied at nearby Seneca College, where some fellow students told news media he had a way with computers.

As a teen, he had an awkward personalit­y, those who knew him then said.

“He was known to meow like a cat and try to bite people,” though he never was violent, wrote Alexander Alexandrov­itch, who said in a Facebook post he went to high school with Minassian.

Others said Minassian had struggled socially, especially with women. He’d intone, “I’m afraid of girls,” former high school classmate, Ari Blaff, told news media. Another classmate, Josh Kirstein, told The New York Times that Minassian “would cower and avoid eye contact when he saw a girl.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States