Red pill. Blue pill. Black pill.
As a parent, it can be hard to figure out what kids are talking about at the best of times, without having to decode incel-oriented language. (Incels, or involuntary celibates, believe they’re unable to form sexual relationships with women due to a combination of their looks and societal structures.)
But unfortunately, such are the times we live in.
Speaking to Joeli Brearley and Elliott Rae on their To Be A Boy podcast this week, Meadhbh Park, the author of Blackpilled, suggested the black pill ideology is now “bigger than” the red pill ideology online.
“I think the red pill has lost a lot of its fire ... The black pill has morphed into the mainstream,” she claimed.
But what does this actually mean? And why should ...


English (US)