
pashanimair
god change my bones
- Joined
- Mar 9, 2025
- Posts
- 1,764
- Reputation
- 12,045
Throughout human history, young men have always been in competition, and competition has always been the engine of evolution, driving the strongest and most dominant males to the top.
Strength, skill, risk taking, and dominance determined who would reproduce and pass on their genes.
Today, the rules have changed, modern society has removed almost all natural selection pressures for young men, cities, welfare, and technology reduce the survival risks that once separated the weak from the strong, video games, streaming, and social media provide endless dopamine hits that distract men from real world challenges, and traditional rites of passage, physically demanding labor, and competitive survival have been replaced by bureaucratic systems where compliance often matters more than capability.
This collapse of biological competition directly affects male reproductive success, women are still biologically hypergamous, seeking top tier men, and most young men no longer face natural challenges that would force them to become high value in the traditional sense.
The result is an increasing number of average men becoming invisible in the mating market, unable to compete biologically.
Modern stimuli artificially raise dopamine levels, masking the pain of failure and reducing motivation to improve, men grow complacent, losing the drive to compete physically, socially, and sexually.
This is not just laziness, it is a systemic defeat orchestrated by the environment. Young men today are biologically capable but socially neutered, the system removes the natural pressures that once created elite males, and most men never reach their full potential because the external challenges that forged strong competitors no longer exist.
Meanwhile, women still operate under evolutionary rules, choosing the small percentage of men who appear dominant or genetically superior.
The collapse of biological competition has created a generation of men who are physically, socially, and sexually underdeveloped compared to their evolutionary potential, modern society rewards compliance over strength, comfort over risk, and virtual achievement over real world dominance.
Young men face an uphill battle that few will survive biologically or socially, while evolutionary rules continue to operate mercilessly
pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
@Gomez @dex0bp @Ralix @EvilSatanArseRapist @FramePillGymMaxx
Strength, skill, risk taking, and dominance determined who would reproduce and pass on their genes.
Today, the rules have changed, modern society has removed almost all natural selection pressures for young men, cities, welfare, and technology reduce the survival risks that once separated the weak from the strong, video games, streaming, and social media provide endless dopamine hits that distract men from real world challenges, and traditional rites of passage, physically demanding labor, and competitive survival have been replaced by bureaucratic systems where compliance often matters more than capability.
This collapse of biological competition directly affects male reproductive success, women are still biologically hypergamous, seeking top tier men, and most young men no longer face natural challenges that would force them to become high value in the traditional sense.
The result is an increasing number of average men becoming invisible in the mating market, unable to compete biologically.
Modern stimuli artificially raise dopamine levels, masking the pain of failure and reducing motivation to improve, men grow complacent, losing the drive to compete physically, socially, and sexually.
This is not just laziness, it is a systemic defeat orchestrated by the environment. Young men today are biologically capable but socially neutered, the system removes the natural pressures that once created elite males, and most men never reach their full potential because the external challenges that forged strong competitors no longer exist.
Meanwhile, women still operate under evolutionary rules, choosing the small percentage of men who appear dominant or genetically superior.
The collapse of biological competition has created a generation of men who are physically, socially, and sexually underdeveloped compared to their evolutionary potential, modern society rewards compliance over strength, comfort over risk, and virtual achievement over real world dominance.
Young men face an uphill battle that few will survive biologically or socially, while evolutionary rules continue to operate mercilessly
The Young Male Syndrome—An Analysis of Sex, Age, Risk Taking and Mortality in Patients With Severe Traumatic Brain Injuries - PMC
Higher risk taking is particularly characteristic for males between 15 and 35 years, the age when intrasexual competition is the strongest. This fitness-maximizing strategy, however, also has negative consequences; previous data revealed that males ...

The socialization of boys and men in the modern era: An evolutionary mismatch - PMC
This paper examines the misalignment between modern human society and certain male phenotypes, a misalignment that has been highlighted and explored in great detail in the work of Tom Dishion. We begin by briefly enumerating the ongoing ...

@Gomez @dex0bp @Ralix @EvilSatanArseRapist @FramePillGymMaxx
Last edited: