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To: Maurice Winn who wrote (141072)5/1/2018 12:23:14 AM
From: Elroy Jetson  Respond to of 217910
 
Shadowy online subculture in spotlight after Toronto van attack - thestar.com

A Facebook message attributed to accused killer Alek Minassian has led to scrutiny on the “incel” movement and online communities steeped in misogyny.

In the chaotic aftermath of a mass murder in North America, two things are predictable. One is that there will be wild speculation over the killer’s Armenian Christian background and motive, with people guessing about specific aspects of his identity.
The other is that only one prediction will hold true in nearly every case.

“I knew that it was going to be a man,” said Michael Kaufman, a member of the G7 Gender Equality Advisory Council. “Virtually all of the school shootings — the mass shootings, the terrorist attacks, whether it’s a white nationalist terrorist attack or a religiously inspired terrorist attack — they’re almost always committed by men.

“And the incredible thing? We don’t focus on that,” he continued. “We instantly go to step two: what was his motivation? What was his psychological problem? By jumping to that second step, we’re neither going to be able to address the underlying causes or understand these people — or find solutions.”

On Monday, a rented van jumped a curb on Yonge St. south of Finch Ave. and began deliberately mowing down pedestrians, leading to the worst mass murder in Toronto’s history.

Ten people died and another 16 were injured. Alek Minassian, 25, faces 10 charges of first-degree murder and 13 counts of attempted murder, with three more attempted murder charges pending.

Details about Minassian’s life remain scant but, in the scramble for answers, some have pointed to his autism spectrum disorder — even though experts stress there is no scientific link between the condition and a propensity for violence.

A more relevant point may be the fact that Minassian is male. According to a study by Columbia University forensic psychiatrist Michael Stone, of 235 mass murders in the United States between 1913 and 2015 involving four or more deaths, 96 per cent were perpetrated by men.

Mass murder is an almost exclusively male phenomenon,” Stone writes in “Mass Murder, Mental Illness and Men.”
Most mass murders are planned well in advance of the outburst, usually as acts of revenge or retribution for perceived slights and wrongs.”

A Facebook post attributed to Minassian suggests retribution directed at women as a motive. The message referenced one of the internet’s most unabashedly misogynistic communities: young men who identify online as “incels” — or involuntary celibates — because they are frustrated by their inability to find romantic relationships or sex.Minassian’s online history will form an important aspect of the unfolding homicide probe: posts he wrote, searches he made, and online communities he may have frequented. Investigators seized his Facebook profile to archive its content, including a “cryptic” Facebook message posted just minutes before the van rampage, according to Toronto police Det. Sgt. Graham Gibson.

The investigation will examine whether sexual frustration or anger towards women helped form the motive. While police say there is currently no evidence that women were targeted, eight of the 10 fatalities were female. Police will scour surveillance and witness video for indications the van was steered deliberately towards female pedestrians, an investigator said Friday.

Toronto police Insp. Bryan Bott told reporters that “all avenues” will be explored when it comes probing Minassian’s online activity, including any possible link to the incel community.

“Where that investigation goes, it’s too early to tell,” Bott said.

What’s certain, however, is that the internet has provided fertile breeding ground for misogyny and sexism. Those who study online misogyny say incels are just a sliver of a broader online ecosystem dubbed the “manosphere,” where seething anti-feminist hatred has been intensifying over the last several years.

The manosphere is a loose assemblage of blogs, forums and pages scattered across YouTube, Facebook and Reddit, as well as 4chan, the notorious messaging board widely associated with trolling culture, conspiracy theories and far-right extremism.

Its roots can be traced back to the 1970s, when a men’s liberation movement emerged in response to second-wave feminism, according to a 2017 study by Debbie Ging, an associate professor with Dublin City University.

The movement was meant to critique conventional understandings of masculinity but quickly splintered into pro- and anti-feminist factions, “due largely to disagreements over the claim that male privilege adversely affects women,” Ging wrote. The anti-feminists believed men were in decline and this strain of thinking has now permeated the manosphere, where a “widespread and particularly malicious anti-feminist men’s movement” has been incubating.

“It’s a vast and growing network of misogynists — there’s no other word for them,” said Nicolette Little, who is pursuing her doctorate in feminist media studies at the University of Calgary. The manosphere is “very angry” with women and feminism, and online groups provide “space for that toxicity, for those ideas to be shared, proliferated,” Little said.

There is significant overlap between the racist alt-right movement and the manosphere, where major themes include misogyny, sexual strategies and men’s rights. A popular trope is to be “red pilled,” a reference to the 1999 movie The Matrix, where the protagonist Neo is asked to choose between a blue pill — which returns him to his normal life of ignorant bliss — or the red pill, which will reveal the true order of the world.

In the manosphere, “being red-pilled means eschewing liberal ideology and recognizing that men, not women, are the oppressed class,” according to a 2017 report by Alice Marwick and Rebecca Lewis with Data & Society, a think tank specializing in the cultural and social impact of the internet.

“The connecting tissue of the manosphere is that men are actually the ones suffering in modern society, and our laws and society is now balanced in favour of women,” Lewis said.

There’s intermingling within the manosphere: There are Pick-Up Artists (PUAs), a “seduction community” that trades in strategies for getting sex; Men’s Rights Activists (MRAs), who feel boys and men are victimized, particularly by feminists; and Men Going Their Own Way (MGTOW), who vow to never date, marry or have children.

And then there are incels. The phrase was coined in the 1990s by a Canadian woman who started a website for lonely singles. In 2001, researchers from Georgia State University surveyed 82 involuntary celibates in an online discussion group and found the majority were young, white and male. These people feel “despair, depression, frustration and a loss of confidence” because of their inability to have sexual relationships, the researchers concluded. They looked to the internet, not for sexual stimulation but for “moral support.”

Fast-forward 17 years and some incel forums have flourished to 40,000 or more members. They have also developed their own culture, replete with insider-speak. Incels are “betas,” conventionally attractive men are “Chads,” and the women who date them — and spurn incels — are “Stacys.”

Lewis said many incels self-identify as autistic. “You get a lot of people kind of embracing that identity, whether or not they’ve actually been diagnosed with autism,” she said. “It’s become this broader meme for being socially awkward and that’s yet another reason why they don’t see themselves as advantaged or privileged in society.”

Some incels discuss their sadness or confusion on forums like Incels.me. One user, who identified himself as Jack Peterson, called it a “support group.” “Incels.me is my main place as far as venting goes, just because it tends to be more brutally honest than the rest of these types of communities,” said Peterson, who declined to give his real name, in a phone interview.

Peterson insists that only a “vocal minority” of users are misogynists, but a quick glance at the website reveals a startling degree of anti-women hatred. There are several posts idolizing Elliot Rodger, the California man who killed six people because he was sexually frustrated, with some commenters encouraging others to follow in his footsteps and commit their own “ER” attack. The Facebook post attributed to Minassian concluded with the phrase “All hail the Supreme Gentleman Elliot Rodger!” After Monday’s attack, many incels celebrated gleefully on Incels.me, while others blamed women for the attack. “By having sex with the guy you could’ve saved 10 lives,” one commenter said.

“It’s worthwhile to see how incels are reacting and many are thrilled about it,” said Lewis. “It’s easy to see how this pent-up frustration is manifesting as violence. There are posts talking about, ‘How else can we act on this?’ and people are promoting acid attacks, rapes, poking holes in condoms.”

Jamil Jivani, author of the book Why Young Men: Rage, Race and the Crisis of Identity, believes disaffected men are drawn to extremist views because they offer an identity of sorts — telling them how to think and feel, and providing community and affirmation.

What could help counteract this, he thinks, is a broader definition of masculinity. He cites Toronto police Const. Ken Lam, who arrested Minassian without using force.

“This guy, being restrained and calm, and not being reactive?” Jivani said. “That is how you diversify masculinity.”

Kaufman said society is failing boys and men by perpetuating ideas that they have to always be dominant and in control.

“Many men who commit acts of violence … there are two things we know about them: They’re much less likely to have gender-equitable attitudes, and much less likely to ask for help,” he said.

“When you combine that power and that entitlement, with that personal insecurity about being a real man, it has the potential to be a lethal combination.”



To: Maurice Winn who wrote (141072)5/1/2018 12:29:59 AM
From: Elroy Jetson  Respond to of 217910
 
‘We’re not a violent group of people’: Ex-classmate of Alek Minassian speaks out about autism -

Kyle Echakowitz had been in the same high school special education class for students with autism as man charged in Yonge St. rampage.



Kyle Echakowitz, 20, attended the same high school as Alek Minassian, where they were in a special class for students with autism.

Kyle Echakowitz’s heart sank upon hearing the news.

This week’s van rampage on Yonge St. and reports the man allegedly behind the carnage has a form of autism called Asperger syndrome, sent Echakowitz’s mind racing back to 2012 when another autistic man shot 20 children and six adults at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Connecticut.

“It feels like a bit of a repeat of Sandy Hook. And now it’s here. And very close to home,” said Echakowitz, 20, who was also diagnosed with Asperger’s and uses the term “autistic.”

Back then, like today, Echakowitz, who identifies as non-binary and uses the pronouns “they” and “them,” spoke to reporters about autism, a complex, neurobiological disorder that affects communication and social interaction.

“I had to plead with non-autistic folks that we’re not a violent group of people, which is a very awkward thing for a 15-year-old kid to do,” Echakowitz said.

“When you grow up autistic, you don’t really get a chance to be a kid. You have to be more mature by default. Because otherwise, the entire community gets misrepresented. And you get blamed for it,” Echakowitz added.

This week, it’s not just people on the spectrum Echakowitz is defending. Echakowitz and Alek Minassian also went to the same high school, Thornlea Secondary, where they were classmates in a special education class for students with autism spectrum disorder. (Asperger’s, was dropped as a subcategory of the disorder in 2013 and is now defined as autism spectrum disorder, or ASD.)

Minassian, 25, of Richmond Hill, is facing first-degree murder charges in the deaths of 10 people, and attempted murder charges for 13 others injured in the attack.

A 20-year old Thornhill resident on the autism spectrum who attended a special education class for autistic students at Thornlea Secondary School where Alek Minassian was also a student.

Echakowitz was in Grade 9 in 2011 when Minassian was in Grade 12.

The class, called “learning strategies” was a welcome refuge for kids on the spectrum, Echakowitz recalled, adding autistic behaviours, including arm flapping and other repetitive movements, were understood for what they are: self-calming and focusing strategies.

“We see in the media . . (non-autistic) classmates of Alek making some comments that really show just how much misconception there is around autism and what it means to be autistic.

“Those are the kinds of things that we do to regulate ourselves and help us cope with our environments,” said Echakowitz who is in the social service worker program at Seneca College and hopes to work with autistic children in the school system.

When people on the spectrum become overstimulated and overwhelmed, they can have “meltdowns” and can appear enraged, Echakowitz said.

But what Minassian is alleged to have done on Monday, appears to have been thought-out in advance, Echakowitz noted. “Meltdowns are not premeditated.”

There have been reports Minassian may have identified as an “incel,” or “involuntarily celibate,” which refer to men who are frustrated by their inability to find romantic relationships or sex. But online incel communities are dominated by misogynistic hatred and Echakowitz is troubled by the possibility Minassian may have been involved with them.

In a press conference this week, police acknowledged a “cryptic” message was posted on Minassian’s Facebook page shortly before his arrest in the hit-and-run spree, referring to an “incel rebellion” and U.S. mass murderer Elliot Rodger.

But if Minassian was involved with incel, it is more likely this community targeted him, Echakowitz said.

When it comes to violence, autistics, like all people with disabilities, are more likely to be the victims rather than the perpetrators, Echakowitz added.

“I think it’s going to be very important to hear what (Minassian) has to say in court . . . because too often when these things happen we don’t get that story right,” Echakowitz said.

Parents of children on the autism spectrum are also worried about Minassian’s diagnosis and the stigma it casts on a community already vulnerable to attack and misunderstanding.

Laura Kirby-McIntosh, who has two children with autism, including an 18-year-old who attends Thornlea Secondary School and is in the same autism class Minassian attended, said this week’s events have been a “kick in the stomach.”

There is horror and sorrow for the victims, but also fear, she said.

People in the community are asking themselves “if they have to defend (an alleged) mass murderer to protect autistic people,” she said.

“We’re worried about people connecting dots that shouldn’t be connected when there is no diagnostic link between autism and violence or autism and extremism,” added Kirby-McIntosh, vice-president of the Ontario Autism Coalition.

“I’m processing as a parent and as an observer that people on the spectrum may be more vulnerable to extremist ideas if they are not carefully supervised,” she added. “Sometimes our kids seem to have a magnetic attraction to computers. It’s a worry.”

Technology and the internet present a whole new set of challenges for people living with autism, said Dr. Kevin Stoddart of the Redpath Centre, a private clinic that provides mental health services for adults with autism and neurodevelopmental conditions.

“Many are vulnerable. Many are isolated and lonely and are looking for community of some kind. But they may not be a good judge of the quality of the community or the actors in that community,” Stoddart said in an interview.



“I worry about people on the spectrum getting drawn into (online) communities that are not helpful and are not healthy from a mental health standpoint,” he added.

Isolation, black-and-white thinking and difficulty with social nuance all make people on the autism spectrum vulnerable, Stoddart said.

Social Justice Reporter Laurie Monsebraaten talk about the importance of reporting on events that associate crime with autism and how her interview with Kyle Echakowitz, who was in the same special ed class for kids with autism at Thornlea Secondary School as Alek Minnasian, provided more clarity on the issue at hand for readers.
“People may attribute mental health issues to autism incorrectly. And that often means the mental health issues aren’t treated,” he said.

To address the problem, Stoddart helped form the Ontario Working Group on Mental Health and Adults with ASD in 2014 to bring psychiatrists and other mental health providers together with autism experts to share expertise with a view to better serving this vulnerable group.

“Obviously this is a devastating development,” he said about the violence on Yonge St. “And maybe it points to specific treatment that we need to think about for people who are prone to rage, and explosive, highly destructive kinds of behaviours like this.”

“So many people are suffering who have been directly and indirectly involved in this.” Stoddart added. “We’re all very heartbroken.”



To: Maurice Winn who wrote (141072)5/1/2018 12:45:51 AM
From: Elroy Jetson  Respond to of 217910
 
Sex and Shame: What Incels and Jihadists Have in Common - nytimes.com

By Simon Cottee - Mr. Cottee is a criminologist who studies terrorism.

As an instrument for delivering publicity, terrorism clearly works. Or at least it did last week, when the hitherto obscure term “incel” went viral after Alek Minassian drove a truck into a crowd of pedestrians in downtown Toronto. Mr. Minassian, just before carrying out his attack, wrote a post on Facebook in which he proclaimed the arrival of an “incel rebellion.” Standing for “involuntarily celibate,” the term is used as a badge of honor among a fringe online subculture of misogynists who say they hate women for depriving them of sex. So now we know.

Were it not for that post, speculation about Mr. Minassian’s attack would have focused on its connection to the Islamic State. It certainly looked like an Islamic State attack: The terrorist group has been aggressively inciting its followers to kill Western civilians with motor vehicles, and since then there have been many such attacks. Mr. Minassian cannot have been oblivious to these horrific rampages and the tremendous publicity that they attracted. This was an Islamic State-inspired attack minus the Islamic State ideology.



Mr. Minassian is obviously a deeply troubled individual. And mass murder is driven by a variety of psychological factors. But much of Mr. Minassian’s trouble seems to have been fueled or exacerbated by the frustration and shame that accompanied his lack of sexual contact with women. This would have made him feel unfulfilled and indignant, and also weak and unmanly. The sense of shame from not being able to perform a culturally approved sex role may be a key to understanding his murderous rage. It may also be another thread connecting him to other violent actors whose ideology is different from his own, yet whose actions are similar. It is not difficult to spot parallels with the world of jihadism, where women and sex are similarly fixated on to an extraordinary degree.

Among those who identify with the “incel” movement, there is a pathological fixation on sex and women, and there is a self-pitying perception that everyone else, except the community of “incels,” is having sex. Women are craved, but they are also reviled for what the incels believe is their selective promiscuity: They seem to be having sex with everyone but them. This is internalized as a grave personal insult. The function of the “incel” movement is to transform that personal grievance into an ideology that casts women as despicable sexual objects.

The core emotion that animates “incels” is sexual shame. It’s not just that these men are sexually frustrated; it’s that they are ashamed of their sexual failure. At the same time, they are resentful of the sexual success of others, which amplifies their own sense of inadequacy. This explains why they gravitate toward an online subculture that strives to rationalize their shame and redirect the blame for their failure onto women.

Like incels, jihadists similarly crave sex, but the circumstances surrounding its consummation are closely regulated by their religious norms, which prohibit sex outside of marriage and same-sex couplings. Among jihadists, even masturbation is frowned upon, although Osama bin Laden famously issued a masturbation fatwa, permitting it in times of urgent need.

This repressive attitude toward sex and sexuality has led some commentators to suggest a connection between sexual frustration and the murderous rage of jihadist suicide bombers.

The evolutionary biologist and atheist Richard Dawkins, for example, suggested that far from being motivated by thoughts of injustice, the Sept. 11 hijackers were driven by thoughts of sex. Referring to the “martyr’s reward of 72 virgin brides,” he asserted that “testosterone-sodden young men too unattractive to get a woman in this world might be desperate enough to go for 72 private virgins in the next.” Developing this theme further, the late Christopher Hitchens wrote that the jihadists’ “problem is not so much that they desire virgins as that they are virgins.”

Or as the sociologist Mark Juergensmeyer once put it: “Can’t get married, can’t have sex, so they blow things up.”It’s easy to dismiss these observations as reductive caricatures in their portrayal of Muslims as sexually repressed. And, of course, jihadist violence is about far more than just sexual frustration. But there is too much anecdotal evidence about the sexual torment of jihadists and their ideologues to reject the connection outright. For example, Sayyid Qutb, the grandfather of jihadist ideology, was disgusted by Americans’ sexual license during the 1950s, yet he was clearly viscerally excited by its spectacle.



Mohammed Atta, the leader of the Sept. 11 hijackers, instructed in his will that his body be prepared for burial by “good Muslims” and that no woman was to go near it, presumably because he found them dirty and spiritually contaminating. This aversion to women didn’t stop him from visiting a strip club just before the attack, but it did prevent him from shaking women’s hands. One extremist reportedly told the terrorism scholar Jessica Stern that he was “vaginally defeated.”

According to Professor Juergensmeyer, “Nothing is more intimate than sexuality, and no greater humiliation can be experienced than failure over what one perceives to be one’s sexual role.” Furthermore, he argues, such failures “can lead to public violence,” which is performed to cancel out feelings of shame and reassert the claim to manhood.

It’s possible that Mr. Minassian’s ramming attack in Toronto was just such a performance, and that what he most wanted was to make himself visible to all those women who had, in his mind, made him feel worthless and invisible. However confused and hallucinatory, it was a claim to his virility as a man, as well as an indictment on a sexually promiscuous world from which he had been excluded. That’s a claim that many jihadists would no doubt understand, if not indeed sympathize with.

Simon Cottee ( @simonrcottee) is a senior lecturer in criminology at the University of Kent and a contributing writer to The Atlantic.



To: Maurice Winn who wrote (141072)5/1/2018 1:01:30 AM
From: abuelita1 Recommendation

Recommended By
Cogito Ergo Sum

  Read Replies (4) | Respond to of 217910
 
"Why did you run over all those people Alek?"

i dunno. because i am male?? because i could?

does there always have to be a reason? is it
supposed to make us feel better?



To: Maurice Winn who wrote (141072)5/1/2018 1:48:26 AM
From: Elroy Jetson  Respond to of 217910
 
There's more incels around than many suspect.





To: Maurice Winn who wrote (141072)5/3/2018 3:41:54 PM
From: Elroy Jetson  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 217910
 
Qualcomm: Meet the new boss of everything mobile - zdnet.com

Recent merger activity, a changing political climate, and the company's significant IP portfolio is poised to create a virtual monopoly of mobile and telecommunications technology


This week, T-Mobile US and Sprint announced their intention to merge, which -- if approved -- would create the second largest mobile telecommunications provider in North America behind Verizon Wireless and ahead of AT&T.

The technical details of how the two companies intend to merge their infrastructure and build out an entirely new 5G network are not entirely worked out yet, but one company's technologies will almost certainly become the center of it all: Qualcomm's. Verizon is already a Qualcomm shop, and Sprint is a Qualcomm shop. So, it is probably a foregone conclusion that, for the newer 5G tech deployment, the new T-Mobile will also be a Qualcomm shop.

AT&T, like the existing T-Mobile, uses different technologies for its 4G implementation: LTE, and GSM for voice, which is compatible with global standards. Qualcomm's CDMA, compared with GSM and LTE, is used only in a small number of markets globally, which includes Japan. Many of these mobile data networks are currently being phased out in favor of LTE.

AT&T and T-Mobile, up until now, have gone the path of global compatibility. AT&T has been partnering with Huawei -- the largest manufacturer of telecommunications equipment in the entire world -- on creating a global 5G standard.

Qualcomm could become the world's most powerful telecomThings have not been going so well lately in the US for Huawei and other Chinese firms like ZTE. And despite the initial revenue shortfall that Qualcomm may face by losing access to ZTE, in the long run, it looks like it could be very advantageous for them.

It appears to me that if Huawei is prohibited from doing business here, Qualcomm is positioned to become the most powerful telecom and mobile equipment manufacturer in the world. This includes not just their lines of business for critical components that go into smartphones and mobile devices, but the Internet of Things, cloud SoC processing, Wi-Fi equipment (enterprise and consumer), and carrier equipment (RF, switching, management).



In addition to Huawei, other big losers include Samsung and Intel. The above chart is a mapping of Qualcomm's lines of business versus competitors in the space.

With the exception of Displays, Batteries, and Flash/RAM, Qualcomm is at least as powerful a company as Samsung's semiconductor division in terms of product breadth. The only difference is that Qualcomm has Samsung, TSMC, and others manufacturing components on their behalf.Qualcomm's tech could power most of the major US carriersIf Huawei -- like ZTE before it -- is shoved out of the US, this means that Qualcomm technology will power most (or all) of the major carriers and their devices in the US. Its Snapdragon SoC will power virtually all Android devices sold in this country, and its RF front end and baseband chips/modems will be on virtually every mobile device.

Apple is also in the middle of a lawsuit with Qualcomm and is currently in the process of replacing its baseband mobile chips with Intel's, which have garnered significant criticism in terms of their overall performance and reliability.

With this T-mobile/Sprint merger, it is likely Apple will have to settle this lawsuit and go back to Qualcomm for its 4G and 5G chipsets in order to have carrier aggregation in the US using a single component.

It doesn't make sense to do business with Intel when the entire 5G network infrastructure in the US will be Qualcomm-based. AT&T may be forced to abandon its interoperability and 5G buildout efforts with Huawei and begin conversations with Qualcomm if it hasn't been doing so already.

Qualcomm can make its own phones in ChinaQualcomm, now having the entire share of the US telecom market, can then take its components and make its own phones in China, like it did in the 1990s. TSMC could make the chips, Sharp ( Foxconn) or LG can produce the displays, and it can go elsewhere for flash and batteries. Foxconn can then do final assembly.

Companies like the new T-Mobile and Verizon may also now look to build and brand their own 5G-compatible smartphone devices, with Qualcomm acting as the master ODM/primary contractor.

Potentially, this could threaten the market share of companies like Samsung, LG, Motorola, and even Apple.

There are some unknown variables in this equation, though. Japan's Softbank, which is a majority partner in T-Mobile and will own a significant portion of the new merged company, is also the owner of ARM Holdings, which licenses intellectual property to many companies for semiconductor designs that go into smartphone chips, including Qualcomm's Snapdragon, Samsung's Exynos, Huawei's Kirin, and Apple's A-series.Whether Softbank and ARM will be happy with the idea of king-making Qualcomm at the expense of other large architectural licensees is a big question mark.

Creating a new virtual monopolyIncreasing Qualcomm's industry prominence and creating a new virtual monopoly is not the only potential outcome. Currently, Qualcomm and Huawei have been undergoing interoperability testing for their 3GPP Release 15-based 5G components and have reported success.

If conditions do not continue to deteriorate with China, it's possible that we can avoid the current situation where many phones made for CDMA networks do not work ideally on other 4G LTE/GSM networks.

But, if conditions worsen, we could be due for a repeat, where the standards could diverge and we could find ourselves in a situation where 5G phones built for US networks do not work in major global markets.

With the T-Mobile/Sprint merger, is Qualcomm poised to become the most powerful technology company in the mobile and telecom industry?