Lazyandtalentless
Wizard
★★★★
- Joined
- Oct 21, 2024
- Posts
- 4,394
It’s hilarious when married men get called incels. Like, they’re literally married, yet as soon as they say something critical about women, the label "incel" gets thrown at them. It’s as if people forget what the word actually means and just use it as a catch-all insult.
What’s even funnier is the irony of it all—these men are in relationships, proof that they’re not involuntarily celibate. It’s almost as if being a good person or having progressive opinions doesn’t matter if you’re attractive or successful enough. Society seems more interested in projecting outrage than actually engaging with the substance of what’s being said. The label isn’t about accuracy—it’s a convenient way to dismiss someone without confronting their argument.
At the same time, it highlights how superficial judgments have become. People don’t bother to understand the context or the person; they just slap on a label that fits the narrative they want to push. It’s almost as if the truth doesn’t matter as long as the insult sticks. In a way, it shows how much modern discourse has devolved into performative outrage and weaponized language.
What’s even funnier is the irony of it all—these men are in relationships, proof that they’re not involuntarily celibate. It’s almost as if being a good person or having progressive opinions doesn’t matter if you’re attractive or successful enough. Society seems more interested in projecting outrage than actually engaging with the substance of what’s being said. The label isn’t about accuracy—it’s a convenient way to dismiss someone without confronting their argument.
At the same time, it highlights how superficial judgments have become. People don’t bother to understand the context or the person; they just slap on a label that fits the narrative they want to push. It’s almost as if the truth doesn’t matter as long as the insult sticks. In a way, it shows how much modern discourse has devolved into performative outrage and weaponized language.