E
Edmund_Kemper
Disregard my larping efforts. I can’t change it.
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- Joined
- Sep 26, 2019
- Posts
- 25,309
if you're ugly, you are an outcast. you are seen as inferior and laughed at by everyone and at the bottom of the hierarchy. the chads and stacys are on the top of the hierarchy. but nowadays, the blackpill isn't the only thing that makes us hated, it's the fact that it's now trendy to hate on incels and we're now a target that the internet's obsessed with. for some reason, people don't pay too much attention to us and pay way more attention to another extremely hated group, baby boomers. i'd say baby boomers are more hated than us right now because the internet always complains about them.
if you look at the history of the internet, you'll notice that in every time period of the internet, there's that one group of people who everyone online likes to hate on. currently we and baby boomers are that group of people. Here's the timeline
Late 90s/early 2000s - i have NO idea what group of people was hated online back then. there wasn't any social media back then but there were forums and chatrooms and whatnot. there was dial-up internet and i guess without social media, it was difficult to get the entire internet to hate on a specific group of people. if i had to guess, i assume maybe cyberbullies back then were just bullying anyone who they thought was weird or just bullied random people.
mid-late 2000s/early 2010s (2004-2013): emo/scene kids. i remember back then, i saw a bunch of people hating on emo kids and scene kids back then. it was really insane. if you were emo back then, in the offline world, you might sometimes teased but i think many people would still be nice to you. online, however, you'd get cyberbullied. i saw so many people hating on emo kids back then, usually metalheads and punk rockers hated on them. i saw all these anti-emo videos on youtube from 2006-2009 back then, there were many. like this one viral video back then called "why emo/scene kids suck" or something. and i saw emo kids get hassled all day online back then. there was also this emo girl named xpunkprincessx or something like that (can't remember the exact username) who uploaded a video on youtube back in like 2007 defending emo kids and she received lots of death threats and shit. most people who hated on emo/scene kids were metalheads and punk rockers.
early 2010s: justin bieber fans AKA beliebers. in the early 2010s, justin bieber was extremely famous but extremely violently hated. his fans were all girls ages 11-15 or something and he was just 15/16 years old. anyone who didn't listen to his music back then hated his guts. if you weren't 11-15 year old girl back then, you probably violently hated him. people always typed "justin bieber is gay he sucks and has a tiny penis" and online, if you admitted to liking his music, you'd get cyberbullied. the music video for "baby" was the most disliked video on youtube back then and in the comments were trolls and they would harass justin bieber fans constantly. i remember this 14 year old boy named Eric Douglace made a video in October 2010 defending bieber and threatening to hack the accounts of haters and his video went viral and he got laughed at by everyone. The hated towards justin bieber continued for the rest of the 1st half of the 2010s, and then in 2015, when bieber released his purpose album, he suddenly wasn't so hated anymore, probably because he was no longer a baby-faced teenybopper singer and made more mature music.
2002-present: nice guys: the internet has this weird obsession with nice guy syndrome. idk why. i never found nice guys that interesting to learn about. but apparently the origin of hating on nice guys dates back to 2002 when Heartless Bitches International wrote an article complaining about nice guys back in 2002. the article received some views in 2002 according to web.archive.org but in 2004 the amount of views it received skyrocketed. in february 2004, an anti-nice guys comic was posted online and quickly went viral online in 2004. in the early 2010s (circa 2012), websites like buzzfeed or tumblr began to complain about nice guys on okcupid. in 2010, the r/niceguys subreddit was created and although the word nice guy has existed for decades, its meaning changed. in fact, its original meaning continued to be its most famous definition until the 2010s. before the 2010s, most people defined nice guys as unassertive men who don't stand up for themselves and are too nice. now, it's defined as men who are nice until they freak out over being friendzoned. although the internet already began hating on nice guys in the mid-2000s, most people back then still thought of unassertive men when they used the word nice guy. now, they just think of the guy who freaks out over being friendzoned. urban dictionary definitions about nice guys from the 2000s decade usually weren't hostile at all (except a few) with some even being posted by nice guys. all the urban dictionary definitions of nice guys in the 2010s however are condemning nice guys. it seems like even in the mid-2000s, the internet didn't focus on nice guys as much as they do now i guess. but nice guys are still one of the outcasts of the internet.
early-mid 2010s: "neckbeards". suddenly online at the time, there was a big stigma online against having a beard on your neck. i know, why the fuck would the internet have an obsession with that type of beard? people called you a neckbeard if you were into anime, were a nice guy, liked my little pony or whatever. i don't hear the word neckbeard much anymore. i heard a stereotype that many nice guys have neckbeards but i doubt it honestly.
mid-2010s: people who wear fedora hats. i remember back then, there was a HUGE stigma against fedora hats on the internet back then. i never understood it. i was never a fan of fedora hats but i didn't hate fedora hats either. they just weren't my style. i never knew why the internet was so obsessed with fedora hats. i guess they thought nice guys wore them but i doubt that many nice guys wore fedora hats. i've noticed that the internet doesn't complain about fedora hats anymore. haven't heard about fedora hats in a long time.
2010s-present: people who believe they were born in the wrong generation. i never understood why people online got mad if you said you want to live in the 70s or 80s or 90s or whatever. so what if someone wants to live in the 80s or 90s or whatever? it's their life and i don't see how what they're doing is a bad thing. it doesn't harm anyone. so why is it any of your business? i remember wondering when this hate towards these people began, so I looked at forums from the early 2000s, 2010s, late 2000s, etc. and searched a lot. i found out that in the 2000s, nobody online cared if you said you were born in the wrong generation. people said they were born in the wrong generation back in the 2000s and back then, nobody cared or got mad. but in the 2010s, if you typed you were born in the wrong generation, everyone online would freak out. also, in the 2000s decade, on forums, if you said modern music sucks, some people would agree and while some would disagree, they'd disagree in a civil manner and if they said there's still good music out there, they were civil about it. in the 2010s, if you said modern music sucks, everyone online would scream and insult you. but before the 2010s, nobody cared online if you said you were born in the wrong decade. in fact, it was 2011 or 2012 when people online began to hate people who claim to be born in the wrong generation. before 2011/2012, nobody online cared if you claimed to be born in the wrong decade. that r/lewronggeneration subreddit didn't exist until August 15, 2013.
late 2010s: incels. the incel community still existed when ER was still alive and he knew the word "incel" but i guess he didn't swallow the blackpill yet. but it was 2017 when people online began to know about incels and then when the toronto van incident happened in like 2018, everyone knew who incels are.
2010s-present: baby boomers. i think it was early 2010s when the hatred towards baby boomers got big. but in the second half of the 2010s, hating baby boomers became A LOT more trendy. nowadays, everyone online hates baby boomers. honestly, 90% of people who hate boomers wouldn't even hate them if it wasn't trendy to hate boomers. they only hate boomers because it's trendy. and most boomers don't hate millennials. most people who complain about millennials are actually millennials themselves, especially right-wing millennials.
if you look at the history of the internet, you'll notice that in every time period of the internet, there's that one group of people who everyone online likes to hate on. currently we and baby boomers are that group of people. Here's the timeline
Late 90s/early 2000s - i have NO idea what group of people was hated online back then. there wasn't any social media back then but there were forums and chatrooms and whatnot. there was dial-up internet and i guess without social media, it was difficult to get the entire internet to hate on a specific group of people. if i had to guess, i assume maybe cyberbullies back then were just bullying anyone who they thought was weird or just bullied random people.
mid-late 2000s/early 2010s (2004-2013): emo/scene kids. i remember back then, i saw a bunch of people hating on emo kids and scene kids back then. it was really insane. if you were emo back then, in the offline world, you might sometimes teased but i think many people would still be nice to you. online, however, you'd get cyberbullied. i saw so many people hating on emo kids back then, usually metalheads and punk rockers hated on them. i saw all these anti-emo videos on youtube from 2006-2009 back then, there were many. like this one viral video back then called "why emo/scene kids suck" or something. and i saw emo kids get hassled all day online back then. there was also this emo girl named xpunkprincessx or something like that (can't remember the exact username) who uploaded a video on youtube back in like 2007 defending emo kids and she received lots of death threats and shit. most people who hated on emo/scene kids were metalheads and punk rockers.
early 2010s: justin bieber fans AKA beliebers. in the early 2010s, justin bieber was extremely famous but extremely violently hated. his fans were all girls ages 11-15 or something and he was just 15/16 years old. anyone who didn't listen to his music back then hated his guts. if you weren't 11-15 year old girl back then, you probably violently hated him. people always typed "justin bieber is gay he sucks and has a tiny penis" and online, if you admitted to liking his music, you'd get cyberbullied. the music video for "baby" was the most disliked video on youtube back then and in the comments were trolls and they would harass justin bieber fans constantly. i remember this 14 year old boy named Eric Douglace made a video in October 2010 defending bieber and threatening to hack the accounts of haters and his video went viral and he got laughed at by everyone. The hated towards justin bieber continued for the rest of the 1st half of the 2010s, and then in 2015, when bieber released his purpose album, he suddenly wasn't so hated anymore, probably because he was no longer a baby-faced teenybopper singer and made more mature music.
2002-present: nice guys: the internet has this weird obsession with nice guy syndrome. idk why. i never found nice guys that interesting to learn about. but apparently the origin of hating on nice guys dates back to 2002 when Heartless Bitches International wrote an article complaining about nice guys back in 2002. the article received some views in 2002 according to web.archive.org but in 2004 the amount of views it received skyrocketed. in february 2004, an anti-nice guys comic was posted online and quickly went viral online in 2004. in the early 2010s (circa 2012), websites like buzzfeed or tumblr began to complain about nice guys on okcupid. in 2010, the r/niceguys subreddit was created and although the word nice guy has existed for decades, its meaning changed. in fact, its original meaning continued to be its most famous definition until the 2010s. before the 2010s, most people defined nice guys as unassertive men who don't stand up for themselves and are too nice. now, it's defined as men who are nice until they freak out over being friendzoned. although the internet already began hating on nice guys in the mid-2000s, most people back then still thought of unassertive men when they used the word nice guy. now, they just think of the guy who freaks out over being friendzoned. urban dictionary definitions about nice guys from the 2000s decade usually weren't hostile at all (except a few) with some even being posted by nice guys. all the urban dictionary definitions of nice guys in the 2010s however are condemning nice guys. it seems like even in the mid-2000s, the internet didn't focus on nice guys as much as they do now i guess. but nice guys are still one of the outcasts of the internet.
early-mid 2010s: "neckbeards". suddenly online at the time, there was a big stigma online against having a beard on your neck. i know, why the fuck would the internet have an obsession with that type of beard? people called you a neckbeard if you were into anime, were a nice guy, liked my little pony or whatever. i don't hear the word neckbeard much anymore. i heard a stereotype that many nice guys have neckbeards but i doubt it honestly.
mid-2010s: people who wear fedora hats. i remember back then, there was a HUGE stigma against fedora hats on the internet back then. i never understood it. i was never a fan of fedora hats but i didn't hate fedora hats either. they just weren't my style. i never knew why the internet was so obsessed with fedora hats. i guess they thought nice guys wore them but i doubt that many nice guys wore fedora hats. i've noticed that the internet doesn't complain about fedora hats anymore. haven't heard about fedora hats in a long time.
2010s-present: people who believe they were born in the wrong generation. i never understood why people online got mad if you said you want to live in the 70s or 80s or 90s or whatever. so what if someone wants to live in the 80s or 90s or whatever? it's their life and i don't see how what they're doing is a bad thing. it doesn't harm anyone. so why is it any of your business? i remember wondering when this hate towards these people began, so I looked at forums from the early 2000s, 2010s, late 2000s, etc. and searched a lot. i found out that in the 2000s, nobody online cared if you said you were born in the wrong generation. people said they were born in the wrong generation back in the 2000s and back then, nobody cared or got mad. but in the 2010s, if you typed you were born in the wrong generation, everyone online would freak out. also, in the 2000s decade, on forums, if you said modern music sucks, some people would agree and while some would disagree, they'd disagree in a civil manner and if they said there's still good music out there, they were civil about it. in the 2010s, if you said modern music sucks, everyone online would scream and insult you. but before the 2010s, nobody cared online if you said you were born in the wrong decade. in fact, it was 2011 or 2012 when people online began to hate people who claim to be born in the wrong generation. before 2011/2012, nobody online cared if you claimed to be born in the wrong decade. that r/lewronggeneration subreddit didn't exist until August 15, 2013.
late 2010s: incels. the incel community still existed when ER was still alive and he knew the word "incel" but i guess he didn't swallow the blackpill yet. but it was 2017 when people online began to know about incels and then when the toronto van incident happened in like 2018, everyone knew who incels are.
2010s-present: baby boomers. i think it was early 2010s when the hatred towards baby boomers got big. but in the second half of the 2010s, hating baby boomers became A LOT more trendy. nowadays, everyone online hates baby boomers. honestly, 90% of people who hate boomers wouldn't even hate them if it wasn't trendy to hate boomers. they only hate boomers because it's trendy. and most boomers don't hate millennials. most people who complain about millennials are actually millennials themselves, especially right-wing millennials.