Canada’s recent federal election suggests a growing gender divide in political preferences.

Polling indicated women voters leaned strongly toward the Liberals, while an increasing number of men — particularly younger men — gravitated toward the Conservatives.

This polarization was not simply a matter of partisan preference but reflected deeper social, cultural and economic realignments rooted in identity politics and diverging values.

The gender gap also mirrors patterns across western democracies, where far-right populist parties increasingly draw male support through nationalist, anti-immigration and anti-feminist narratives, while women — especially racialized and university-educated — opt for progressive parties promoting equality and social protection.

  • Victor Villas@lemmy.ca
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    1 day ago

    I did not say “it’s just the right” so …

    I don’t understand the point for which “eat the rich” is the case, nor what you mean with “natural issues”. Yes, systemic issues are generally associated with a particular in-group and a particular out-group, that’s how they tend to become systemic - oppression has a source and a target. And?

    • HonoredMule@lemmy.ca
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      1 day ago

      And at which point does messaging about the source of oppression stop guarding against the natural human inclination to substitute “source demographic” with “individual in that demographic?” Because that’s all it takes – both for bigotry to take root and for it to be perceived by those individuals. In pop culture terms, I have no idea when if ever it stopped. Regarding men specifically, I only witnessed it start half-heartedly/infrequently in the last few years.

      Power imbalance is a natural systemic issue in so far as it sometimes having natural sources/root causes, but more importantly it’s inherent propensity toward positive feedback loops.

      “Eat the rich” is an example of messaging that has completely lost the plot of systemic issues while highlighting the outgroup and not coming only from fringe extremists. Sure, it means “redress socioeconomic inequality and impose greater fairness for all” but it sure doesn’t say that. If it did, it wouldn’t have the power and popularity that comes from appealing to the baser, target-hungry instincts of all humans.

      • Victor Villas@lemmy.ca
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        1 day ago

        Sure, it means “redress socioeconomic inequality and impose greater fairness for all” but it sure doesn’t say that.

        So what’s the issue, again? Just that it sounds scary?

        Why is “eat the reach” messaging that “lost the plot” if the slogan does exactly what it’s supposed to do (be powerful and popular, appealing to human nature)?

        And at which point does messaging about the source of oppression stop guarding against the natural human inclination to substitute “source demographic” with “individual in that demographic?”

        I don’t know, you tell me. I don’t see rich people getting the short end of a stick because out there a bunch of protestors are holding “eat the rich” plaques. I still don’t quite get what’s this phrase being used as an example for given it’s so inconsequential.

        • HonoredMule@lemmy.ca
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          1 day ago

          Maybe sleep on it and try coming back with fresh eyes. I’m getting exhausted just looking at all the threads to pluck in this comment. And I sincerely mean no disrespect nor judgement, but seeing this conversation through is starting to look like more work than I’m personally willing to invest while I’m supposed to be on vacation.

          • Victor Villas@lemmy.ca
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            1 day ago

            lol fair enough, and it’s perhaps a not very useful point to dwell anyway, it seems it was just an example