there's an old African proverb the goes something like "if a village doesn't not embrace it's young men then they will burn down the village to feel it's warmth"
@rileymclaughlin4831Ай бұрын
"It takes a child, to raze a village"
@robpepper91052 ай бұрын
I'm disappointed that this conversation about masculinity that lasted nearly 2 hours did not talk about mentorship. In my view, having access to mentorship as a boy, young man and middle-aged man is the most important concern today in regards to maturation in men. Maybe the closest they came to talking about that topic was the notion ontological security, but they did not go into it at all - how a sense of self is engrained in the psyche over time.
@loriomyoreo82242 ай бұрын
You are correct, 100%.
@Marcel_Audubon2 ай бұрын
"mentorship" is a faddy buzzword ... middle aged men looking for mentors need to reassess their lives. Bloated egos who think they should be mentors to others coz they're so damn great also need to reassess their lives. Boys don't need mentors, just good parent(s)
@Dee-x9f2 ай бұрын
To be fair, he talks about a study done around community college mentoring programs at 38:33. Same results. Women fared better when controlled for other variables.
@Lauracvh12 ай бұрын
I also thought that the difference between boys and girls in lower income families might have to do with the father (mentor/role model) being absent.
@Lauracvh12 ай бұрын
Let me add that I’m not just talking about class. I am middle class, went through a divorce with a man that was largely absent after and my daughter adapted far faster than my son
@harperwelch51472 ай бұрын
I’m a male who taught elementary school for 11 years and loved it. But it’s not a career than you can raise a family on. I chose to start my own business and worked much better for me and my family.
@zoeolsson56832 ай бұрын
Men are wonderful and i fully support research into how to support boys and men. The feminism movement was never about getting back at men but bring women alongside. Feminism still has many ongoing issues to fix but we don't want men falling behind in other areas either.
@petervizzini40062 ай бұрын
We both know that is a lie
@lamoinette232 ай бұрын
@@petervizzini4006 Gosh, darn it.. I only had to scroll down 3 comments to find the misogynist rebuttal. 🙄 Perhaps @zoeolsson5683 should have been just a tiny little bit more clear... It was about getting your fking boots off of our necks, Mr. J. D. Vance. Only weak men are threatened by women. Only weak men have to oppress women. Only a weak man thinks anything a woman does to better herself is a threat to him.
@philipc8280Ай бұрын
Feminists tell us to follow them to equality while they plant landmines behind them
@philipc8280Ай бұрын
Maybe not for all of you. But you embraced the ones who are mostly interested in revenge. So like it or not, that's what you're about until you stop embracing and defending them
@nicholasrova369817 күн бұрын
That may have been the goal of feminism a long time ago, but that feminism is dead and gone. Third wave feminism is about power, misandry, and foolishness.
@ralfmatters4482 ай бұрын
This has been a fascinating discussion, thank you. As a father of 3 daughters and a pro-feminist man, I was surprised that there was no discussion of western societies valorization of men's capacity for violence. Not that those who identify as women are not capable of violence but society have many industries inviting men into violent ways of being. Young men are submerged in the practice of ranking themselves in the 'skills' of violent activity, think video games, 'contact' sports and representations of military action. Aren't the orchids explained by placing young human 'males' in the socially ambiguous position of eliciting a capacity for violence and simultaneously demanding that they not act upon this valorized capacity, until the sporting club or ruling elite require them. Ask yourself, haven't you thought of yourself as a threat, simply by being a man? Walking in the opposite direction to a woman on the same footpath? We are encouraged to cross over and understandably so, men are the agents of violence against women. The subject position we ask young men to take up, especially in contemporary western societies is structurally unstable, violence is good, violence is bad. The recruitment into violence is pervasive and under erasure. Only those young men with sufficient cultural resources are able to navigate this toxic subjectivity. Women are increasingly asked to take up violent ways of being. We are starting to see young women perform historically masculine pathologies; self harm, increasing risk taking, increasing rates of crimes against another.
@beemo9Ай бұрын
With all other primates, males are innately more physically aggressive, and it seems the case with almost all human societies too. I'm not sure how much of male violence is due to western culture vs. simply a lack of good male role models, especially teachers & fathers. Being raised without a dad is known to increase the risk of behavioral problems and triples the risk of delinquency. The US has the world's highest rate of that
@ralfmatters448Ай бұрын
@@beemo9 I appreciate your conjecture about primates, except for the Bonobo, I think you are correct. But I don't think biology determines behaviour, it certainly predisposes behavour, biology provides the preconditions for complex behaviour but never determines in the modern social world.
@daveSoupy2 ай бұрын
The bit at around 1:32:00 ish about institutions being really important for men is incredibly interesting and probably needs to be explored more. I can see that weekly or monthly meeting of people as being a key way to meet and form relationships for men that wouldn’t happen otherwise.
@TimeIdle2 ай бұрын
You did stupendously, sir. Thank you!
@Sarahhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhr2 ай бұрын
We raise boys and girls differently. At home, in culture, and in institutions. We teach boys to focus on the moment and girls to focus on the future. Plus our culture is set up to not give out any second chances. It’s very hard to succeed (financially and therefore in life) without being perfect from childhood. And a lot of those factors that go into being perfect are out of our control. It’s a rigged game for everyone one but those little differences in how we raise genders really get amplified.
@claireconover2 ай бұрын
I disagree. i’ve observed boys being raised to think of future success… and women, up until a couple decades ago, were still being raised to be home makers now.
@sihasnesh20162 ай бұрын
@@claireconover That's true. But even during those days, boys were raised to become "providers". Today, we don't do that and it must've been one of those reasons. Hope things can be rectified soon.
@philipc8280Ай бұрын
We weren't really raised to focus on anything except a long list of what NOT to be. Worked out great
@threeofeight1972 ай бұрын
Awe. The son thinking only women could be doctors makes me so sad. 😢. It reminds of when I was in kindergarten and told a girl she couldn’t be a doctor because men were doctors and women are nurses. (I thought they were gendered terms for the same thing at the time). Anyway she started crying and I learned something that day. lol. It’s true tho. Kids reflect the world they see. 😕
@TheDavidlloydjones2 ай бұрын
It's worse than you suggest: because the barriers against women entering medicine are so high, the result is that women doctors are comprehensively more competent, intelligent, and caring than male ones.
@sihasnesh20162 ай бұрын
@@TheDavidlloydjones Do you have any source to prove this ? Also I don't think those "barriers" you talking about are as high as you might think during these days.
@cinemapigeon48982 ай бұрын
Scott Galloway would be great guest for this topic.
@ecyranot2 ай бұрын
Very interesting interview. I felt the guest did not have an agenda but told us what he found and when he changed his mind on certain ideas. l was struck by the last third of the show that explored Petersen and Tate and shaping men, there wasn't a single mention of the role of the father!!!!
@harperwelch51472 ай бұрын
All teachers in the US should make $100k per year. Quality of employees, quality of education would go up and good employees would stay in the teaching profession.
@SoulInquiries2 ай бұрын
My 2 cents of life experience: having a now 28 year old son I saw much of this first hand. He's doing fine but he didn't hit his stride until about 26. I understand the frontal lobe for boys is completely developed far later than girls (25 for boys which is why they can't rent a car before then) and all along the parenting journey the girls were FAR ahead of the boys beginning in kindergarten. The girls, as a rule, had it together "out of the gate" but as a rule the boys did not. The kindergarten was filled with boys wanting to run around and had difficulty sitting down and the girls were writing the alphabet, reading, etc. All through the school experience it held true that the girls matured much earlier and were ready for adulthoodmuch earlier. Even post high school into college, my son struggled but made it through. I would say that only now, in his 28th year do I detect mature conversation ability where I can have more of a peer to peer conversation, whereas I could have a similar conversation with a middle school girl with could be on the same level. It has astounded me througout my parenting experience that the boys were, again as a rule, far behind the girls by every measure but most notably in the area of maturity. Girls are usually ready to be adults but it takes much longer for the boys to be interested in being an adult and the responsibilities that entails. They seem happy to remain in childhood much longer.
@lamoinette232 ай бұрын
Girls are often forced to be adults and boys are allowed to remain immature... no?
@ARR409Ай бұрын
Are you serious about that part of your son only having the conversation ability of a middle school girl at 28?
@lindagalliher167223 күн бұрын
In my view Title 9 primarily impacted sports financially. But the big message to girls, who had previously internalized their perceived inferiority, opened their minds to equality.
@davidingham34092 ай бұрын
My favorite and most useful class in junior high school was metal shop.
@paulboileau37582 ай бұрын
It's absolutely bizarre to me that concern for male education, welfare and outcomes could be labelled a "right-wing talking point". Ezra seems almost sheepish and embarrassed to discuss the topic, as though he could be accused of a betrayal of left-wing values. This is a dangerous trend for all American families and the left generally. The Democratic Party's most solid base was working men until at least the late 1970s.
@IamBrixTM2 ай бұрын
Agreed. It’s not even in conflict with his left wing values. So frustrating as far as what this reveals about culture on the left
@beemo9Ай бұрын
It's pathetic that the CDC's site didn't mention mens' disparities, but instead discussed LGBT, minorities, etc. This gives fuel to the right wing argument that our institutions have been captured by "woke" ideology, causing the left to further distance themselves from mens' issues. To make progress, the left needs to not be afraid to say no to its progressives
@nicholasrova369817 күн бұрын
Maybe the left was about the working man decades ago, but not anymore. They've done nothing but demonize men for years now, and because the consequences of that are rearing their head they're now trying to reverse course. But it's too late, the damage has been done.
@denkerdunsmuir33702 ай бұрын
I think developmental issues social and physical are definitely important at the key ages of 5 and 15yoa. I was 9-12 months younger than my peers throughout pre- college schooling due to my birthdate in early fall. Intellectually this was less than an issue than my social development which was problematic due to being an oldest child and by school years being an introvert. Introversion tends to single out children to some power shifting behaviors that stem from or are in fact expressed as bullying. It never occurred to me until 2020's that my birthdate in the fall impacted how I got along in school particularly with my peer relations. Interesting study analysis here.
@mkkrupp24622 ай бұрын
We all compare ourselves to others. When I was young, I remember that boys were valued more than girls. Young boys knew this and I even heard them say that they were glad they weren’t a girl. Young women were urged to get married, they didn’t get equal pay and often had to resign their jobs upon marriage. ‘Their role’ was basically to be mothers and to serve their husbands. This was normal life. Young boys grew up with an innate sense of superiority and the engrained feeling that they were the better sex. This gave them a sense of self esteem that was not really earned. As adults their control of the money, combined with their greater physical strength, gave them power vis a vis women. With the rise of feminism , equal opportunities for women and anti discrimination legislation, (combined with the greater discipline of women) they have lost this sense of superiority, power and status that they previously had. That’s why many of them seem confused and ‘lost’. And, incidentally, that’s why there’s a backlash against feminism and a rise in misogyny.
@philipc8280Ай бұрын
What you fundamentally fail to understand is that there's a new generation of men who weren't alive during these circumstances you mercilessly blame them for. You reap what you sow
@howardkahn63332 ай бұрын
here it is
@beemo9Ай бұрын
I'm surprised Ezra didn't ask about how being raised without a dad increases the risk of educational problems and behavioral problems for boys. The US has the world's highest rate of fatherless kids.
@carmencortelyou94632 ай бұрын
Are there any statistics on whether gay boys fare better, worse, or differently, in school than straight boys?
@scottl96602 ай бұрын
I think boys challenges in school are centered around cognitive development and around classroom management biases. Delaying boys entrance to school by a year or three can help the first. The second will require a change in culture which I don’t think would be addressed. I’m not sure gay boys cognitively develop at rates different from their straight cohorts but I am sure they would need to in order to make the distinction relevant.
@DavidProductions2 ай бұрын
Gay is a wildcard word thrown around far too often. What it only means is a higher level of testosterone which makes guys only want to be with another guy. This is why the more older brothers a dude has, the more exposed to testosterone in a womb, it makes it more likely he is to be gay. I have been told from the moment I was born, based on my cry, it was known my voice is deeper than my older brother's, and yes I am gay. A longer ring finger denotes higher T. Weightlifting for me must happen early in the day because the resulting surge of testosterone in addition to my already high levels makes me a thrill seeker to my detriment if combined with an end of day drop in will power. I made the dean's list through college only after I decided to apply myself. No matter who you are, your attitude towards success is everything.
@zarimc2 ай бұрын
Only about 20 minutes in, but truly how much of the performance difference in certain skills between boys and girls about socialization vs. biology? In both my personal experience and the experiences of my women friends, girls are socialized more growing up into gender roles that beget organization and other skills. From childhood, girls are socialized into roles of care takers whereas boys are socialized as needing to be care taken. It feels like that would play a bigger role than biology given that there doesn’t seem to be much evidence or evolutionary aspects to support girls maturing faster than boys. And given that girls are expected to mature faster (add in dimensions of race when talking about Black and Latina girls in particular) how does that translate into behavioral expectations for girls compared to boys? It seems like it’s less socially acceptable for girls to slack off compared to boys which I think would also play a role in school performance.
@Freelancer4tehwin2 ай бұрын
I mean, we are talking about how, literally and measurably by neuroscience, girls' brains develop faster. Their hormones ramp up faster, they hit measurable developmental milestones from secondary sexual development to growth spurts 1-2 years faster than boys. In fact, there are a number of measurable characteristics which are semi-gendered - that is a number of characteristics in which men or women tend towards respectively, but not exclusively. And we know this. We know that men get colourblindness at a drastically higher rate, and that the ability to see into the near ultraviolet is almost exclusive to women. We know that sexual dimorphism is a thing. Acting like there are no cognitive or developmental differences is an inherently harmful attitude. Socialization matters, certainly - after all, I can't remember the last time a stem boot camp which accepted boys was put on in my community, or the last time opportunities were afforded for boys to talk to men in leadership happened in my school district. But it is naive to think that there aren't a range of physiological difference impacting these children and young adults.
@zoeolsson56832 ай бұрын
These differences aren't as big as they seem. They overlap a lot just the median is different. I think the school system doesn't really model optimal childhood development any child .... In a better designed school system we would have biological and socioeconomic variances mitigation so a child could meet their full potential
@artistandhisdogs13512 ай бұрын
Why didn’t they talk about the change in what boys are being prepared for in manhood? The expectation used to be that men were the head of the household, but society is moving to egalitarian households. If men and women (or lgbt families) hope everyone provides equal finances, childcare, household maintenance etc…then aren’t we changing the goal of what boys are raised toward? (Add to this…changes in the job markets and schools are always behind)
@mkkrupp24622 ай бұрын
Maybe boys should be prepared for ‘Adulthood’ rather than ‘Manhood’. The latter like ‘Womanhood’ is fast becoming outdated. Apart from basic biological differences, why divide 8 billion of us into 2 - with different expectations. We are all individuals and there are huge overlaps in values, views, preferences etc between the 2 genders. There should be no expectations re preconceived ‘roles’ or conditioning into certain roles. Again - we should be treated as individuals regardless of biological sex.
@lamoinette232 ай бұрын
@@mkkrupp2462 This. Not every woman wants to be a wife and mother, in fact many now simply do not considering the heavy pressure of societal roles put on them. At the same time foisting the expectation of "Manhood" onto boys has become detrimental to men's wellbeing. Why can't we just be people, human beings? With adult roles and responsibilities that are not forced onto us by reason of gender??
@philipc8280Ай бұрын
@@lamoinette23 because finding your masculinity is an important step in learning to attract women. And the ability to attract women is basically what decides whether you're a real human or a leper in society
@xzyeee2 ай бұрын
The construct of masculinity has dwindled in authenticity. That has a lot to do with men themselves and how women raised boys to become men in the absence of men. The issue is made worse when we try to define authenticity in relation to what a man is. Doing manhood is more than just being able to name all the tools in a toolbox, more than just pleasing a woman sexually, more than standing like a statue of steel - fists clenched - in front of an F4 tornado, more than just guzzling down a case of beers to impress friends. That's the problem, doing authentic manhood is linked too closely by too many men to the negative, the mundane and the downright dumb... and they high five each other mentally for this. The concept of balance is missing but I think the damage is too severe to reverse.
@bernardzsikla56402 ай бұрын
You applaud your statement. I would only add the modern reality of gender dynamics is a perfect example of perverse and unintended consequences, resulting from the sexual revolutions of the 1960's I would never want society to go back to the reality before 1st wave feminism, but I don't know if society is better as a whole since 1st wave feminism. Our species has non replacement birth rates in a majority of countries and a large percentage of disaffected young men all over the world. Historically, this factor has consistently brought very turbulent political and inter nation conflict. I will theorize that world societies will get very chaotic for the rest of the century. Get will get the popcorn.
@IamBrixTM2 ай бұрын
The left gives a systemic critique for women and rugged individualism for men. THIS is the issue.
@DavidProductions2 ай бұрын
As a leftist, I agree. I can see Tim Walz, Hakeem Jeffries and Pete Buttegeig having a good impact on this
@IamBrixTM2 ай бұрын
@@DavidProductionsDead on. There’s positive masculinity centered on teaching, instructing, sharing, and giving guidance. That’s protects and defends. Unafraid and not threatened by change. Walz is awesome in particular.
@philipc8280Ай бұрын
@@IamBrixTM simply existing isn't enough. They have to talk about these issue and normalize them. But they aren't
@mkkrupp24622 ай бұрын
Forget ‘manhood’. Forget ‘womanhood’. It should be ‘Adulthood’. Let people be individuals and don’t raise children to conform to preconceived roles and expectations for a certain gender. That’s a good part of the problem. Plus - it’s also partly a class problem - with a great disparity in average male wages compared to those of males on higher income levels - and the resulting differential in public status.
@jackjmaheriii2 ай бұрын
We’ve spent 60 years saying men and women are basically the same. They are not. We need to reengage with our natures at a societal if we are to see improvements at a societal level.
@Edo9River2 ай бұрын
❤❤❤ Hey, hey, go ahead and buy of a copy of A. N. Whitehead’s book, On Education, published. In 1912, I think.
@paulboileau37582 ай бұрын
What is the main theme of that book?
@kauakea2 ай бұрын
Not understanding the orchid vs dandelion metaphor? Boys are orchids? Orchids are parasitic/symbiotic, while girls are weeds? Suggest a better metaphor. Is anyone addressing the impact of the loss of male privilege on boys and men?
@jmk15782 ай бұрын
Fragility vs Sturdiness metaphor really. Harder to successfully grow an orchid than a dandelion.
@philipc8280Ай бұрын
They're both flowers, settle down I'm sure you can find something else to get offended about.
@direwolf62342 ай бұрын
was a huge mistake to let girls be in the boy scouts ... at the ages of say 10-14 boys need a space where they can be together without the influence of girls in the mix .. who at that age are farther along in development .. the skills and experiences one has in scouts is best acquired by mentoring of older boys & men and then interacting with your peers as a 'patrol' .. if girls wanted /needed that then the girl scouts should have used the boy scout playbook to provide that for them .. reminder - of the 12 men who landed on the moon 11 had been boy scouts ...
@purplehairedwzrd2 ай бұрын
Boy scouts made that decision because they lost the Mormons, not because they care about girls. Girl scouts is a better program and their gold award is much more difficult to get than the pathetic eagle scout nonsense.
@speedwagon75622 ай бұрын
This problem existed, long before girls entered Boy Scouts…
@direwolf62342 ай бұрын
@@speedwagon7562 yes .. but still a bad idea ...
@danwylie-sears11342 ай бұрын
The number of young men going to college has decreased. Some sources frame this as being mostly about the fact that the number of young people reaching college age has decreased, and some frame it as meaning that boys and men are flat-out not ok. Without numbers from the second camp, I'm more inclined to believe the first.
@Salmagundiii2 ай бұрын
I think the statistics are probably corrected for 'merely' not existing at college age.
@Freelancer4tehwin2 ай бұрын
I mean... they literally are talking about the numbers. Which kind of goes to show you're part of the problem.
@thebookelf21352 ай бұрын
A rare moment, I am with Ezra. Bush is a terrible comparison. 😮 Bush is bad. Let's find another persin to compare to the t-word.
@sihasnesh20162 ай бұрын
Most boys and young men have lost the idea of "purpose" or being "useful". They shouldn't desperately chase after other women. But being motivated enough to treat your parents well after you've become an adult is a very good example.
@harperwelch51472 ай бұрын
Who says most boys have sense of purpose or usefulness based how they treat their parents??
@sihasnesh2016Ай бұрын
@@harperwelch5147 I forgot to mention the reference. There's a channel called ManTalks where he discusses about issues men and boys face. He talked something along the lines of what I said above.
@tanyawilliams82542 ай бұрын
❤
@oleonard73192 ай бұрын
How does it feel working for paper now that is as bad as the New York Post
@akashmurthy74642 ай бұрын
Boys need to mandatorily attend army or NGO for a year or two, before college
@gabrielalarcon54622 ай бұрын
You first brain dead
@DavidProductions2 ай бұрын
Learning to be a soldier is the opposite of learning a script for nurturing
@mariop272 ай бұрын
@@DavidProductionsperhaps. But they would certainly learn discipline and accountability.
@pierheadjump2 ай бұрын
⚓️ Studying equality… all that other crap …. anyone done an impact of the real estate industry???
@maxineobrien64132 ай бұрын
Maybe separating them is the answer.
@zoeolsson56832 ай бұрын
Naah. My ex went to an all boys school most of his peers are divorced. .... Being a teenager is tough. But in a coed school boys see girls at their worst and girls see boys at their worst ... So in the future whatever crazy someone's spouse is doing they can compare it to teen behavior and have a better perspective on whether it's just different.
@David-nd4tn2 ай бұрын
When you keep preaching about how toxic being a dude is, how females should always be believed,how dudes should be soft,how men should just put their head down and get screwed by the laws and society then it should come to no surprise that most of us have checked out, we see this society for what it is and choose to keep to ourselves, you keep living in your bubble but you wont see us engaging you,not socially or monetarily, plenty of good looking chicks overseas, c ya.
@SuperVANessab2 ай бұрын
Wow this makes donalds life easier too bad thing we need fixed
@jasonfoscolo19332 ай бұрын
Too late for that. You are in the middle of the backlash
@RobotProctor2 ай бұрын
Strongly disagree. Making sense of the things people care about can only be a good thing
Mmm soy sauce...I should make some brown rice. How could I possibly know lethal martial arts while also caring about the health of my fellow men? Expand your horizons, mate