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Jack Richard Peterson

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Jack Richard Peterson
Peterson, 2022
Born
Kalerthon Demetro

Known forIncel Activism

Jack Richard Peterson is an American media personality and former, self-proclaimed representative of an incel community[1] named incels.me.

Certain media outlets describe Jack as a spokesperson for incels.me during April 2018,[2][3] while The Daily Beast describes him as unpopular within incels.me and also at one point sanctioned by incels.me staff during April 2018.[4] During his involvement with the forum and after his alleged forum departure in May 2018, he became an on-off media personality on the subject of incels from 2018-2021.[5][6][7]

After the 2018 Toronto van attack, Jack disavowed misogynistic incels.me members and spoke out against hate speech in media interviews, eventually claiming to have left all incel communities entirely.[8]

Incel communities activity[edit]

incels.me activity[edit]

Peterson has claimed in media interviews to have been a minor staff member of incels.me and presented himself as an incels.me spokesperson during April 2018.[3] Journalist Mandy Stadtmiller paints a different picture. During April 2018, while Jack was still a member of the incels.me forum, Mandy writes that Jack was banned by incels.me staff from the incels.me public chat room, before Jack made a 30 minute PowerPoint video to be let back in. According to Mandy, Jack was also insulted as a 'status-seeker' and an 'opportunist' by the incels.me community for attempting to represent their community and trying to paint the incels.me forum in a positive light.[4]

Departure from incels.me[edit]

Jack subsequently began portraying incels in general in a more negative light, describing many as 'entitled' and stating he changed his mind about the hate speech on the incels.me forum being 'ironic'.[9] During May 2018, Peterson announced on his YouTube channel that he left incels.me voluntarily by requesting a permanent ban on incels.me.[10][11][12] He appeared on Invisibilia in April 2019 stating he was in the process of changing in whatever way he could to "make my life not horrible".[13]

Peterson made an appearance on ABC News Nightline in August 2019, discussing his departure from the incel community.[14]

Incel podcast[edit]

He previously ran the "Incelcast", wherein he interviewed incels and discussed how they came to their position.[15] His podcast also discussed the hikikomori phenomenon in Japan and the likelihood of the same thing happening in the Western world.[4]

Views on incels[edit]

He believes that involuntary celibacy is a social phenomenon rather than a movement and has described online communities as support groups for discussing depression and loneliness.[16] Peterson describes incels as commonly being males in their late teens who are shy.[15]

Peterson has compared the demonization of inceldom to the generalizations and subsequent xenophobic and Islamophobic sentiments faced by Muslims in the aftermath of Islamist violence.[4]

Personal life[edit]

Peterson's birth name is Kalerthon Demetro.[4]

Peterson first stumbled upon the manosphere at the age of 11 on 4chan.[4] A psychiatrist has diagnosed him as suffering from paranoid schizophrenia, but this has been disputed by other doctors.[4]

Education[edit]

According to the Daily Beast, Peterson dropped out of High School. He subsequently attended the Chicago Academy for the Arts and dropped out during the first semester.[4]

Relationships[edit]

Despite claiming to be incel, Peterson has stated that he has had a girlfriend in the past, yet claims it was not a productive relationship.[4][13]

Missing persons report[edit]

Peterson was reported missing in December 2019, but was quickly located.[17]

References[edit]

  1. ^ Binder, Matt (November 20, 2018). "Incels.me, a major hub for hate speech and misogyny, suspended by .ME registry". Mashable.
  2. ^ Yang, Jennifer (April 28, 2018). "Shadowy online subculture in spotlight after Toronto van attack". Toronto Star.
  3. ^ a b "'It's a support group for men, not a movement': Spokesperson defends incel community". Global News. Retrieved September 15, 2022.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i Stadtmiller, Mandy (April 29, 2018). "Sympathy for the 'Incel'". The Daily Beast.
  5. ^ Yang, Jennifer; Gillis, Wendy (April 28, 2018). "Shadowy online subculture in spotlight after Toronto van attack". The Star.
  6. ^ Silverman, Anna (May 11, 2018). "Inside The Murky World Of The Male Celibates". Grazia.
  7. ^ Valenti, Jessica (July 25, 2018). "What Feminists Can Do For Boys". The New York Times.
  8. ^ Brown, Jasmine. "Former 'incel' on the violent misogyny that has broken out of the community: 'It's not OK to get sucked into this negative mindset'". ABC News. Retrieved September 15, 2022.
  9. ^ Ling, Justin (June 19, 2018). "'Not as ironic as I imagined': the incels spokesman on why he is renouncing them". The Guardian. Retrieved September 15, 2022.
  10. ^ Griffin, Jonathan (May 12, 2018). "BBC Trending: Inside the Dark World of 'incels'". BBC.
  11. ^ Jeltsen, Melissa (June 7, 2018). "The Unmaking Of An Incel". HuffPost.
  12. ^ Ling, Justin (June 18, 2018). "'Not as ironic as I imagined': the incels spokesman on why he is renouncing them". The Guardian.
  13. ^ a b Rosin, Hanna (April 15, 2019). "The End of Empathy". Invisibilia.
  14. ^ "Former member of 'Incel' community speaks out about dangerous misogyny". ABC News.
  15. ^ a b "'There's a lot of truth in this': Incel spokesperson defends movement praised by Alek Minassian". Globalnews.ca.
  16. ^ Mountford, J. B. "Topic Modeling The Red Pill." Social Sciences 7.3 (2018): 42.
  17. ^ "Man, 21, missing from Montclare located". Fox 32. December 1, 2019.

External links[edit]