Young Americans seems to be having dire difficulty forming relationships, having sex, or getting married. They are also unhappy. Since the one thing happiness research has shown with absolute certainty is that a good marriage contributes a lot to happiness — more than all the money in the world, most studies find — these things may be related.
This problem fascinates and baffles many of us older folks, and I am seeing more and more older men wade into the world of dating advice. I am considering doing this myself, perhaps via a Tiktok called The Old Man's Dating Advice for Young Men. Sample piece of advice: "you do not date women, or hang out with them, or chat with them; you romance them."
One of the weird facets of this problem is the rise of what I will call the Incel Mindset. I don't say "incels," because I think it is wrong to think that some young men are incels and others are not. Incelism is a kind of thinking that any man can fall into on a bad day. Here's a basic definition, via Noah Smith:
Essentially, the incels believe that women are only attracted to a very small number of men — guys who are extremely handsome, extremely high-status, extremely rich, etc. This, they believe, naturally shuts almost all men out of the dating market and condemns them to involuntary celibacy. All the girls go for the top few guys (the “Chads”), leaving all the other guys out frustrated and alone.
Which is of course absurd; there has never been a society in which most people do not marry and have children. The men attracted to incel memes presumably look much like their parents, who (one imagines) had sex with each other. If anything about human life is truly democratic, that would be sex and reproduction.
What got me to write this post was something from Freddie de Boer about what he calls the "incel's veto".
The incel’s veto is the specific prohibition against men ever frankly discussing sex in any positive way that directly reflects the fact that they have sexual experience and thus have earned the consent of women. The incel’s veto weaponizes the natural and healthy inclination to stigmatize actual male bragging about sexual promiscuity (“I get so many girls, bro”) by spreading that stigma to any admission by any man that they have a sexual and romantic life. It’s also, more generally, the idea that in the 2020s we live in a weird discursive space where our perceptions of romantic and sexual behavior are constantly being filtered through the lens of the people who have experienced very little of either. The incel’s veto helps spread the ubiquitous online assumption that nobody is getting laid, anywhere, ever, and that it’s inherently pathological to treat sex and romance as not just healthy aspects of human life but as mundane and achievable.
This is one of the banes of life in the internet age: the dominance of the discourse by people who think everything is terrible. That storm of darkness, that fire of rage, is always there, within reach, ready to echo our own worst thoughts and feelings, to mire us deeper in our worst thoughts and bleakest fantasies.
Look away from it. Look toward the real world around you, toward people getting on with life, people meeting and getting married and having babies.
Stop doomscrolling and go meet somebody.

















































