*I don't want my blog posts to be searchable by epithet
This may not be an entirely right-wing thing--my guess is that the misogynists among the Bernie bros are probably saying similar stuff. Why? Tis in the title: these folks are projecting. They want to make men (mostly) feel bad by suggesting that they are lousy men. Why? I am no feminist scholar (I am a feminist, just not a scholar who uses feminist theories/methods), I guess this people are themselves feeling emasculated. This may be why this campaign seems to be gamer-gate in a different arena.
Of course, some will note that women use these terms as well. Sure, but much of the volume seems to be from males. Of course, when women are the target, the language is not about cucks and the like, but the usual misogynist vocab and, of course, threats (the woman with whom Justin Trudeau made contact in "elbowgate" or parliamess is now being hit by the barrage of internet insults because fans of Liberals can also be illiberal).
The extreme political stances are chock full of hate--hate for women, hate for those who support women, hate for African-Americans, Asian-Americans, Jews, Latinos, LGBT, and Muslims (and Sikhs because ignorant people are easily confused). And the US now has a candidate who has successfully been stoking these flames of hate to get to the nomination of a major party.
Lots of stuff is being written on why this is coming out from under the rocks now, but it has always been there, of course. Racism, homophobia, misogyny, and xenophobia are not new. The internet has made it possible for groups of losers (those who either lost in life or feel they are losing their advantages over others) to gain an outsized voice by directing attacks at specific people, especially women and minorities. It is not just the anonymity of the web as plenty of idiots gave away their identities when attacking the Nevada Democratic Chairwoman, but anonymity does have a role, of course. As does Donald Trump who has been inciting hate for the past year (more than that since he was a birther for quite some time, but more so lately), leading to hate crimes quite directly.
And, yes, this stuff is intensifying because these folks have been losing the big political battles. They rail at Social Justice Warriors precisely because gays are now more accepted, that transgender people are now being treated more positively (a long way to go, of course), that women are breaking through some glass ceilings, and, yes, we have a black President. Whenever I see someone use the SJW, I assume that they are a gamer-gate kind of misogynist because if one is on the opposite side of a social justice warrior, does that not make the person a fan of injustice?
So, what can I conclude from this rambling rant? That it sucks to be a loser? That much of the hate is venom spewed by those on the wrong side of history? That those who use cuck and other terms to denigrate the masculinity of their opponents have small hands and peni? I guess we cannot dismiss these folks because they can and do resort to violence, but perhaps we can remember that they are losing, that their losing is a source of their animus, and that we need to keep winning the battles that improve the opportunities for all. And if the losers do not want to partake in a better society, we need to marginalize them and the politicians who tolerate or empower them. Which, of course, means vote against Trump.
Update: I forgot one of my key points: there are all kinds of men with all kinds of ways to be a man, so these folks have a very specific idea of what is it is to be a man. And, the irony is that their cowardice--attacking folks online, using lame insults rather than good arguments--actually contradicts their ideal John Wayne-esque kind of manhood. But then again, their efforts to emasculate others emasculates themselves more than anyone else.
Your last point is an excellent one - that calling out insults from behind a wall of anonymity is actually a hypocritical betrayal of the "John Wayne" "say that to my face" image of masculinity that these people otherwise seem to want to cling to. Threats of violence combined with cowardice have long been a staple for such folks, who would act very differently if they had to back up their words with fists or subject themselves to actual interpersonal violence. In a previous era, "say that to my face" was in fact an acceptable defense to such insults, and sometimes enough to quiet the one making them.
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