"After slow gains in women’s rights, the country is facing a
type of political correctness enforced by young men angry at feminists, saying
they undermine opportunity.
SEOUL — They have shown up whenever women rallied against
sexual violence and gender biases in South Korea. Dozens of young men, mostly
dressed in black, taunted the protesters, squealing and chanting, “Thud! Thud!”
to imitate the noise they said the “ugly feminist pigs” made when they walked.
“Out with man haters!” they shouted. “Feminism is a mental
illness!”
On the streets, such rallies would be easy to dismiss as the
extreme rhetoric of a fringe group. But the anti-feminist sentiments are being
amplified online, finding a vast audience that is increasingly imposing its
agenda on South Korean society and politics.
These male activists have targeted anything that smacks of
feminism, forcing a university to cancel a lecture by a woman they accused of
spreading misandry. They have vilified prominent women, criticizing An San, a
three-time gold medalist in the Tokyo Olympics, for her short haircut.
They have threatened businesses with boycotts, prompting
companies to pull advertisements with the image of pinching fingers they said
ridiculed the size of male genitalia. And they have taken aim at the government
for promoting a feminist agenda, eliciting promises from rival presidential
candidates to reform the country’s 20-year-old Ministry of Gender Equality and
Family.
South Korea is reckoning with a new type of political
correctness enforced by angry young men who bristle at any forces they see as
undermining opportunity — and feminists, in their mind, are enemy No. 1.
Inequality is one of the most delicate issues in South Korea, a nation with
deepening economic uncertainty, fed by runaway housing prices, a lack of jobs
and a widening income gap.
“We don’t hate women,
and we don’t oppose elevating their rights,” said Bae In-kyu, 31, the head of
Man on Solidarity, one of the country’s most active anti-feminist groups. “But
feminists are a social evil.”
The group spearheads the street rallies and runs a YouTube
channel with 450,000 subscribers. To its members, feminists equal man haters.
Its motto once read, “Till the day all feminists are
exterminated!”
The backlash against feminism in South Korea may seem
bewildering.
South Korea has the highest gender wage gap among the
wealthy countries. Less than one-fifth of its national lawmakers are women.
Women make up only 5.2 percent of the board members of publicly listed
businesses, compared with 28 percent in the United States.
And yet, most young men in the country argue that it is men,
not women, in South Korea who feel threatened and marginalized. Among South
Korean men in their 20s, nearly 79 percent said they were victims of serious
gender discrimination, according to a poll in May.
“There is a culture of misogyny in male-dominant online
communities, depicting feminists as radical misandrists and spreading fear of
feminists,” said Kim Ju-hee, 26, a nurse who has organized protests denouncing
anti-feminists.
The wave of anti-feminism in South Korea shares many of the
incendiary taglines with right-wing populist movements in the West that peddle
such messages. Women who argue for abortion rights are labeled “destroyers of
family.” Feminists are not champions of gender equality, but “female
supremacists.”
In South Korea, “women” and “feminists” are two of the most
common targets of online hate speech, according to the country’s National Human
Rights Commission.
The backlash represents a split from previous generations.
Older South Korean men acknowledge benefiting from a
patriarchal culture that had marginalized women. Decades ago, when South Korea
lacked everything from food to cash, sons were more likely to be enrolled in
higher education. In some families, women were not allowed to eat from the same
table as men and newly born girls were named Mal-ja, or “Last Daughter.”
Sex-preference abortions were common.
As the country has grown richer, such practices have become
a distant memory. Families now dote on their daughters. More women attend
college than men, and they have more opportunities in the government and
elsewhere, though a significant glass ceiling persists.
“Men in their 20s are deeply unhappy, considering themselves
victims of reverse discrimination, angry that they had to pay the price for
gender discriminations created under the earlier generations,” said Oh Jae-ho,
a researcher at the Gyeonggi Research Institute in South Korea.
If older men saw women as needing protection, younger men
considered them competitors in a cutthroat job market.
Anti-feminists often note that men are put at a disadvantage
because they have to delay getting jobs to complete their mandatory military
service.
But many women drop out of the work force after giving birth, and much
of the domestic duties fall to them.
“What more do you want? We gave you your own space in the
subway, bus, parking lot,” the male rapper San E writes in his 2018 song
“Feminist,” which has a cult following among young anti-feminists. “Oh girls
don’t need a prince! Then pay half for the house when we marry.”
The gender wars have infused the South Korean presidential
race, largely seen as a contest for young voters. With the virulent
anti-feminist voice surging, no major candidate is speaking out for women’s
rights, once such a popular cause that President Moon Jae-in called himself a
“feminist” when he campaigned about five years ago.
Yoon Suk-yeol, the candidate of the conservative opposition
People Power Party, sided with the anti-feminist movement when he accused the
ministry of gender equality of treating men like “potential sex criminals.” He
promised harsher penalties for wrongfully accusing men of sex crimes, despite
concerns it would discourage women from speaking out.
But Mr. Yoon also recruited a prominent 31-year-old leader
of a feminist group as a senior campaign adviser last month, a move intended to
assuage worries that his party has alienated young female voters.
By law, Mr. Moon cannot seek re-election. His Democratic
Party’s candidate, Lee Jae-myung, has also tried to appeal to young men,
saying: “Just as women should never be discriminated against because of their
gender, nor should men suffer discrimination because they are men.”
Mr. Lee sees the gender conflict largely as a problem of
dwindling job opportunities, comparing young South Koreans to “chicks
struggling not to fall off a crowded nest.” “We must make the nest bigger by
recovering growth,” he has said.
It is hard to tell how many young men support the kind of
extremely provocative and often theatrical activism championed by groups like
Man on Solidarity. Its firebrand leader, Mr. Bae, showed up at a recent
feminist rally dressed as the Joker from “Batman” comics and toting a toy water
gun. He followed female protesters around, pretending to, as he put it, “kill
flies.”
Tens of thousands of fans have watched his stunts
livestreamed online, sending in cash donations. During one online talk-fest in
August, Mr. Bae raised nine million won ($7,580) in three minutes.
Women’s rights advocates’ fear is that the rise of
anti-feminism might stymie, or even roll back, the hard-won progress South
Korea has made in expanding women’s rights. In recent decades, they fought to
legalize abortion and started one of the most powerful #MeToo campaigns in
Asia.
Lee Hyo-lin, 29, said that “feminist” has become such a
dirty word that women who wear their hair short or carry a novel by a feminist
writer risk ostracism. When she was a member of a K-pop group, she said that
male colleagues routinely commented on her body, jeering that she “gave up
being a woman” when she gained weight.
“The #MeToo problem is part of being a woman in South
Korea,” she said. “Now we want to speak out, but they want us to shut up. It’s
so frustrating.”
On the other side of the culture war are young men with a
litany of grievances — concerns that are endlessly regurgitated by
male-dominated forums. They have fixated, in particular, on limited cases of
false accusations, as a way to give credence to a broader anti-feminist agenda.
Son Sol-bin, a used-furniture seller, was 29 when his former
girlfriend accused him of rape and kidnapping in 2018. Online trolls called for
his castration, he said. His mother found closed-circuit TV footage proving the
accusations never took place.
“The feminist influence has left the system so biased
against men that the police took a woman’s testimony and a mere drop of her
tears as enough evidence to land an innocent man in jail,” said Mr. Son, who
spent eight months in jail before he was cleared. “I think the country has gone
crazy.”
As Mr. Son fought back tears during a recent anti-feminist
rally, other young men chanted: “Be strong! We are with you!”"
In Lithuania, women have also flooded universities and take better jobs and career opportunities, while many men are forced to ruin their health and possibilities and become conscripts. All the more so as the case of Ukraine shows that conscripts in modern warfare do not impress the enemy.
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