
Do you remember gay modernity? This is a similar kind of discourse. And Andrew Tate lives in their heads rent free. Some OG manosphere types think he is British intelligence psy-op to discredit men’s grievance movement, and anti-feminist sentiment. That’s why you see British press regurgitate his image all the time to imprint it in the minds of their drone readers.
While it won’t come as news to most that, compared with women, men litter more, recycle less, and leave a bigger carbon footprint There’s something more extreme than simple thoughtlessness causing young men, in a form of anti-environmental protest known as “rolling coal”, to modify the diesel engines on their pickup trucks to deliberately belch large amounts of grey-black exhaust, and then run Priuses and bicyclists off the road.
Prius is girly and bicycles are gay.😆👌
What connects the dots here is something more unhinged and tangled: a hyper-aggressive, oil-soaked version of toxic masculinity known as “petro-masculinity”. And it’s crucial to understanding why we as a society are failing to rally behind a shared ecological vision.
Petrol ⛽️ is toxically masculine. 😆👌 How does stepping on gas and hearing the engine roar make you feel?
As a longtime climate activist, I’d seen this gendering of the climate fight up close and personal. Whether it was Fox pundits factlessly spouting climate denial or dude-trolls calling you a “cuck” in the comments just for caring about the planet, it was impossible not to notice a certain type of man with certain type of attitude: usually white male and angry, fronting an aggressive – and noticeably dick-ish – defense of the fossil fuel status quo. It usually came with a strutting display of male prerogative and privilege, including the privilege of destroying the planet, if that’s what they felt like.
Fossil fuels have been deposited in the ground by ancient lifeforms in the Carboniferous period for us humans to find them and make use of them. I don’t think there is anything unnatural about them. Carbon in the atmosphere will be eventually absorbed by plants and other organisms on land and in the seas. I am personally much more concerned about habitat destruction, loss of nature, than burning coal. Today coal can be burned in a much cleaner manner than in the past. I don’t know why we shouldn’t keep making use of it if it still found in the ground?
