In light of South Korea’s increasingly popular 4B movement — a feminist way of life in which women opt out of the patriarchy altogether — some politicians have taken to blaming the women of Seoul for men’s plummeting mental health. According to the BBC, a Seoul city councilor named Kim Ki-duck argued in a new report that the country’s “change into a female-dominant society” might “partly be responsible for an increase in male suicide attempts.” The councilor went on to imply that as women have joined the workforce in growing numbers, men have been left with lesser odds of finding a job and finding a woman to marry.
Councilor Kim reportedly came to this conclusion after analyzing data on the number of suicide attempts made along Seoul’s Han river, which showed a rise in male suicides. Despite Kim’s confidence on the matter, suicide-prevention experts told the BBC that aside from being outwardly misogynistic, it is “dangerous and unwise to make claims like this without sufficient evidence.” Song In Han, a mental-health professor at Seoul’s Yonsei University, also noted that, globally, more men die by suicide than women.
In response to the BBC’s request for comment, Kim insisted he had “not intended to be critical of the female-dominated society,” and was simply relaying his opinion. Despite Kim’s personal resistance, the 4B movement continues to flourish, awakening women not just in South Korea, but around the globe to a life absent of men.
In the U.S., the national 988 Suicide & Crisis Lifeline can be reached at 988 (call or text) or 988lifeline.org (chat).