The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Inside the world of ‘incels’

Group linked to Toronto suspect is grounded in misogyny.

- By Abby Ohlheiser

We know that Alek Minassian is facing 10 counts of first-degree murder, one for each of the people he is accused of killing on April 23 in Toronto. Police say he drove a van into pedestrian­s in a busy shopping district in the city. What we don’t know yet, for sure, is why.

When such an attack occurs, people search for an explanatio­n in whatever informatio­n is available. Those scouring the suspect’s social-media presence believed they’ve found it, in a post that appeared there the same day as the attack. The post, now deleted by Facebook along with Minassian’s entire account, praised “Supreme Gentleman Elliot Rodger” and declared that the “Incel Rebellion has already begun!”

Police, and Facebook, have not yet confirmed that Minassian wrote this post himself, or that it bears a direct connection to the suspect’s motive. Regardless of its connection to the attacks, the post’s viral spread has had the effect of introducin­g the concept of “incel” to a wider audience. Even in 2018, when the boundaries between the dark corners of the internet and mainstream audiences are as permeable as ever, the concept of “incels” has mainly remained out of the spotlight.

Incel is partially explained by what it stands for: involuntar­ily celibate. But in online culture, “incel” means more than just a support group for the lonely and shy — it refers to a specific, insular, self-radicalize­d community with roots in the anti-feminist, misogynist “manosphere” and 4chan culture.

Incels share a central thesis: that their involuntar­y celibacy results from the shallownes­s of women, who they think want to date only traditiona­lly attractive men. Their members have, in a way, leaned in to being “ugly.” Incel posts often refer to men and women who do have sex by the jock-ish names “Chad” and “Stacy,” the subjects of a river of insulting and derogatory memes.

“Frustratio­n with relationsh­ips and lack thereof are pretty common human experience­s. What makes the incel culture different

is that these are primarily heterosexu­al white men who are directing their anger in a misogynist­ic way towards women,” said Ross Haenfler, an associate professor of sociology at Grinnell College who studies subculture­s and masculinit­y. “There may be some real pain there, but that pain results from a misplaced anger.”

Incel communitie­s have existed online for a long time, in one form or another. In 2001, Georgia State University researcher­s studied a small sample of people who were active in these communitie­s. The respondent­s were mostly white, young men who said that their involuntar­y celibacy had links to negative self-image, a sense that their sexual developmen­t was behind that of their peers, and depression, the study found.

Today, incel communitie­s exist on Reddit — although some of their subreddits were recently banned — and on 4chan. There are also incel sites with dedicated message boards and, increasing­ly, closed chat rooms on the message app Discord, with moderators who vet their membership to keep out the prying eyes of observers and journalist­s.

It is not clear whether, or where, the Toronto suspect engaged incel’s online communitie­s, but a post on Minassian’s page is an unambiguou­s reference to several incel memes: “Private (Recruit) Minassian Infantry 00010, wishing to speak to Sgt 4chan please. C23249161. The Incel Rebellion has already begun! We will overthrow all the Chads and Stacys! All hail the Supreme Gentleman Elliot Rodger!”

Each of these phrases has an explanatio­n, but let’s focus on the most troubling: Elliot Rodger.

In 2014, Rodger killed six people in California. He left behind an extensive digital history, including a lengthy manifesto and a YouTube video in which he vowed a “day of retributio­n” against the women who had sexually rejected him. Some members of the darker parts of the incel internet elevate Rodger — and now, Minassian — as heroes.

One user of incels.me referred to “That moment when this random dude killed more people than the supreme gentleman Elliot,” as rumors began to spread that Minassian might be one of them. Another anonymous user opined that the women of Toronto deserved to die.

It bears repeating that we still don’t know the motive in the Toronto attack. Eight victims were women and two were men, police have said, but have not elaborated on whether the victims were targeted.

The incel championin­g of Rodger and Minassian is “a convenient, if disturbing symbol” of the “aggrieved entitlemen­t” that permeates all of incel culture, Haenfler said. Even when women are the victims of violence, incel logic still can blame those women for being victimized. It is women, the logic goes, that drove men like Rodger to do what they did.

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