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ApathySK on scored.co
1 day ago1 point(+0/-0/+1Score on mirror)
I have a genuine question for you, no hate. I'll be perfectly honest and say I've been MGTOW since 2010 and the movement itself originated around 2006.
What exactly are you looking at, and looking for? The reason I say this is because yes I fully agree with you, 95% of this "info" is old. Very old. But every day there's a new generation of men learning it as if it were new. And you're paying attention to the channels that focus on the "new".
The reason I say this is because there's a ton of channels on youtube that will teach you algebra, with new ones created daily, but very few that will focus on multivariable calculus. It's easier to focus on the basics than on the more advanced topics, more profitable, larger audience, etc. Additionally I would say most men who get through "MGTOW" stop identifying with it because you know, they actually went their own way.
If you want to see what happens after, look into Christian communities, Godliness, passport bro's, self employment, and those who went full monk mode. That's where you'll find the aftermath. There's also tons of workout communities talking about better health, financial communities talking about online study and getting better jobs, self employment, and some discussing content creation, aka being a "youtuber".
But at the end of the day, there's an endless sea of lost men looking for something, and being that one channel who turns them and enlightens them aka algebra is far more profitable than being the multivariable calculus channel. At the end of the day it's all about viewers, that's where the money is. So if you made it this far, would you rather make $50k a year teaching a hard subject, or $300k a year teaching an easy one?
What exactly are you looking at, and looking for? The reason I say this is because yes I fully agree with you, 95% of this "info" is old. Very old. But every day there's a new generation of men learning it as if it were new. And you're paying attention to the channels that focus on the "new".
The reason I say this is because there's a ton of channels on youtube that will teach you algebra, with new ones created daily, but very few that will focus on multivariable calculus. It's easier to focus on the basics than on the more advanced topics, more profitable, larger audience, etc. Additionally I would say most men who get through "MGTOW" stop identifying with it because you know, they actually went their own way.
If you want to see what happens after, look into Christian communities, Godliness, passport bro's, self employment, and those who went full monk mode. That's where you'll find the aftermath. There's also tons of workout communities talking about better health, financial communities talking about online study and getting better jobs, self employment, and some discussing content creation, aka being a "youtuber".
But at the end of the day, there's an endless sea of lost men looking for something, and being that one channel who turns them and enlightens them aka algebra is far more profitable than being the multivariable calculus channel. At the end of the day it's all about viewers, that's where the money is. So if you made it this far, would you rather make $50k a year teaching a hard subject, or $300k a year teaching an easy one?