blitzkrieg wrote:
^ How does the term incel, which stands for involuntary celibate, have anything to do with being a conspiracy theorist or having an eating disorder?
I am curious.
Note that he didn't say they were related, instead that the way they think is adjacent; they all seem to involve making unreasonable connections and fixating on the conclusions those connections suggest rather than investigating other potential explanations.
Conspiracy theorists look for patterns that either aren't there, or have better explanations than the ones they prefer but stick with the ones they prefer regardless, no matter how often they're exposed to evidence to the contrary.
A portion of people with eating disorders also have body dysmorphia and low self-esteem. They're likely to continue to have an unhealthy relationship with food until how they view themselves changes.
A lot of incels seem to harbour the delusion that they're hideous and blame a lot of their failings on their physical appearance and on the suitable gender having too high of standards. They overlook more obvious explanations, even if evidence is provided.
Sometimes these thoughts become more conspiratorial, where they start buying their own Chad and Stacy talking points about how women actively seek to be cruel to people like them, that they're doing it on purpose, etc, etc.
_________________
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If you're not careful, the newspapers will have you hating the people who are being oppressed, and loving the people who are doing the oppressing. —Malcolm X
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