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Related: About this forum'Eat your broccoli and don't listen to Andrew Tate': fighting misogyny is now part of everyday paren
Eat your broccoli and dont listen to Andrew Tate: fighting misogyny is now part of everyday parenting
Isabel Choat
Pushing back against malignant influences has sadly become a common topic between parents and children, but the conversation needs to go on outside the home
Thu 21 Sep 2023 03.00 EDT
Last modified on Thu 21 Sep 2023 06.22 EDT
Last Tuesday a report revealed the extent of sexual assault against female surgeons; on Wednesday a poll showed that sexual harassment was contributing to girls declining happiness; at the weekend the Russell Brand revelations dominated the news cycle. On Sunday we heard how students are now offered consent training alongside climbing and debating clubs at freshers weeks as universities grapple with a rise in sexual violence on campuses. So passed the week: a barrage of headlines followed by a social media chorus of defenders, conspiracy theorists and victim shamers revealing, yet again, the depths of societys misogyny. And that was just the UK. Worldwide, in virtually every profession you can think of, institutions are rushing to respond to allegations that as the title of the Brand documentary references happened in plain sight, in a culture that enabled offenders.
As the campaigner Laura Bates says, theres a collective tendency to assume that society gets progressively better, more equal; but every day brings another grim reminder that were living through an epidemic of misogyny. If it is hard for adults to process that reality, it is even worse for children. Commentators rightly point out how exposure to sexist abuse is crippling girls self-esteem. But lets not forget that boys are also navigating their way through this cesspit.
The other day, my 13-year-old mentioned that Andrew Tates podcast had popped up on his Spotify feed. I was glad he told me and relieved that he didnt want to listen to it but, in the rush to get out of the house for school/work, I didnt dwell on that brief chat. Thinking about it later that day made me want to cry and scream at a world where pushing back against the likes of Tate and his ilk is now part of everyday parenting: eat your broccoli, go to bed on time, and dont get sucked into the worldview of an extremist TikTok star.
Of course Im talking about Tate with my son, as are many parents, horrified at his influence. But these conversations need to go on outside the home too. Schools should be given the resources to address the damage Tate has wreaked instead theyre being told to avoid the topic; men have to be involved in creating change, not looking on helplessly from the sidelines; governments need to do more than cringeworthy campaigns; social media platforms must be held to account not just here but in every place where the internet has allowed the rise of toxicity.
The 2023 Gender Snapshot (https://www.un.org/sustainabledevelopment/blog/2023/09/press-release-the-world-is-failing-girls-and-women-according-to-new-un-report/, published ahead of this weeks UN Summit, warned that the world is failing women and girls. It is failing boys and young men too.
Isabel Choat, commissioning editor, Global Development
https://www.theguardian.com/global-development/2023/sep/21/eat-your-broccoli-and-dont-listen-to-andrew-tate-fighting-misogyny-is-now-part-of-everyday-parenting