According to John Della Volpe, these men are not radicals or incels. They are your sons, or they're your neighbor's sons. Many support equality for women, but they also feel their own concerns go unheard.
Commentators asserted that men's loneliness, disillusionment, declining educational outcomes, under- and unemployment, and feelings of abandonment by Democrats were driving them toward Trump and an almost caricatured vision of masculinity.
The men’s rights movement began spreading across the country in the early 1960s in response to what activists saw as a divorce racket that fleeced men and coddled women.
Understanding the links between the men's rights movement and the current fixation on disillusioned young men is critical because men's rights activists have used many of these claims to advance a political agenda.
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