Andrew Tate's Leaked "War Room" Videos Advise Men To "Isolate" Women From Jobs And Social Circles
Recent leaks from Andrew Tate’s exclusive “War Room” community have revealed disturbing insights into the self-proclaimed masculinity guru’s methods.
The leaked videos and transcriptions, first reported by the Daily Dot, appear to showcase Tate and his associates promoting manipulation, control, and isolation as strategies for dominating women.
The Leaked Content: A Blueprint for Manipulation
In the leaked footage, Tate can be seen advising his followers on how to control women in their lives by isolating them from their social circles. “If she has, like, a really strong social circle, and she really insists on seeing them, they’re going to have a big influence over her,” Tate says, according to the Daily Dot. “And it’s in your best interest to keep her away from that social circle.”
Tate goes on to state that such strict control is necessary to prevent women from being convinced to leave by concerned friends and family. “Women can’t shut the fuck up either,” he adds. “They’ll talk your business, they’ll give their side of the story only. You’re a bad guy now.”
This tactic of isolating women is echoed by Tate’s associate, Waller, who discusses denigrating a woman's friends as a way to gain control. “So one way that I isolate my girl to be only in my frame and not have her friends have influence is I attack her friend’s friend,” Waller says. “And I’ll just attack every one of her friends because I feel … it’s easy to penetrate.”
Control Over Women’s Careers and Lives
The leaks also reveal Tate’s disdain for women having independent jobs or social networks, which he claims detract from their focus on men. “Her brain power is dedicated to things that have nothing to do with you. It’s a massive influence,” he asserts.
In another clip, Tate suggests that women “can’t handle” having normal jobs because it leads to external influences, such as conversations and friendships, which he views as threats. “If she has a normal job, she’s got a social circle, she’s got a support network,” Tate explains. “She knows a bunch of dudes who are trying to get [in her ear]. She has concerns which aren’t involving you.”
Tate advises his followers to deceive their partners about their activities to maintain control. “Even if you want to play video games, set your laptop in a way she literally can’t see,” he says. “‘Say I want to work, baby, I want to work tonight.’ You can play video games on the sly … I said at Hustler’s University, every single thing is a sell. All of it.”
Tate also openly acknowledges that his advice is manipulative, but frames it as strategic. “People will call it manipulation,” he says. “But what you’re really doing is putting the pieces on the chess board in the best place for you to win. You’re the one playing the fucking game.”
Waller similarly describes how to handle women who resist manipulation, suggesting they should be relegated to subordinate roles in the relationship. “Women who refuse to be manipulated must be demoted from the ‘main chick’ to the ‘bottom hoe,’” he states.
By promoting isolation, deception, and emotional manipulation, Tate’s “War Room” appears less like a self-help network and more like a predatory system designed to exploit men’s insecurities while encouraging abusive behavior. Tate’s defenders claim he is misunderstood and that his teachings are about empowering men, but these leaks suggest otherwise.
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