Amid ongoing cultural conversations about gender roles and extremist online ideologies, a satirical take on the manosphere has generated viral attention through a fictional, absurd movement that upends the typical talking points of the Red Pill community.
A joke splinter faction of the controversial Red Pill movement, self-named “Bros Are Better In Every Situation” (shortened to BABIES), has put forward a chaotic, contradictory set of gender demands that turn conventional misogynistic ideology on its head. Unlike mainstream Red Pill groups that typically enforce rigid patriarchal gender hierarchies, this satirical faction claims that while its members hold contempt for women, they also acknowledge women hold a better position in society — and argue that all men should transition to become women, while cisgender women should return to traditional domestic roles solely to bear children for the movement, with a requirement that all offspring be female.
The group’s supposed spokesperson, who identified themselves as Shi Hym and reported being unemployed, delivered a performance rife with contradiction that further leans into the satire. After first agreeing to provide a comment, then backing out, then changing their mind again — all while reading from a pre-written statement — the spokesperson blamed the unfair pressure of media questions for their own inconsistency. When pressed to clarify the movement’s nonsensical platform, they claimed to be channeling their inner two-spirit feminine identity, shouted solidarity with all “sisters”, identified as a “high value man”, and ended by thumping his chest aggressively in an imitation of King Kong, framing the outburst as a demonstration of “superior male logic”.
This absurd bit of satire comes from Mesyé Kwik, a publication known for its humorous, pointed takes on current cultural and social issues. The outlet explicitly labels the piece as a work of satire, noting that the entire scenario is intentionally silly: it is designed to poke fun at the contradictory talking points common in misogynistic manosphere circles, inject lighthearted humor into ongoing cultural conversations, and highlight the underlying absurdity of rigid gender ideology. The outlet adds a tongue-in-cheek disclaimer that anyone who takes the fictional piece seriously will be cursed with all of their children being less intelligent than the collective drama surrounding bouyon music feuds.
