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Here Are All The Disgusting Things Andrew Tate Has Ever Said About Women

Andrew Tate, the self-styled “Top G” who rose to prominence as a social media personality and online gur has marketed himself as a symbol of masculinity, offering "advice" through his "Hustler’s University" and social media. He’s also facing charges of human trafficking, rape, and organized crime in Romania, among other crimes.

By Carmen Schober9 min read
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Tate has managed to cultivate a cult-like following. His defenders, many from right-leaning spaces, argue that he’s a poor, misunderstood role model filling a void for young men in need of guidance. They claim he’s unfairly vilified because he dares to challenge the status quo and offer an alternative model of masculinity.

But would these same people grant a progressive figure the same pass if he openly admitted to exploiting and abusing women, boasted about being cruel and manipulative, and preached degeneracy under the guise of empowerment? Unlikely.

The double standard is glaring. Tate has repeatedly told us exactly who he is—a man who profits from the manipulation, humiliation, and abuse of women. So why insist on searching for a redeeming quality in someone who wears his moral weaknesses like a badge of honor?

Here’s a look at some of the most disturbing things Andrew Tate has ever said or done, in his own words.

Tate Explains His "Pimp Game" in Online Course

Andrew Tate openly discussed his involvement in what he referred to as the "pimp game," describing in detail how he used manipulation and coercion to exploit women for financial gain. Tate’s remarks, taken from a transcript of his discussion, shed light on the methods he used to recruit and control women, a system he refers to as his "PhD course."

“My money was actually made in the pimp game," Tate said. “A pimp is a human trafficker.” He elaborated on his approach, describing the psychological manipulation he employed to make women obey him and generate income. “Having sex with girls is all good, but how do you get them to do as you say, make you money, obey you, allow you to cheat on them in front of their face, and still love them? That’s the game.”

Tate identified his method as the "lover boy" strategy, a form of manipulation often associated with human trafficking. “Romeo pimps are pimps that use manipulation through flattery, through finesse. Because that’s what I did,” he explained. “That was my MO—find girls, make them love me, and make them work for me.”

Tate detailed his approach to recruiting and controlling women for his webcam business, emphasizing his focus on financial gain. “Like my whole [life], I used sex as a tool to make women love me so they’d obey me and live in my house and make me money,” he said. He also described the growth of his operation during the lockdowns, boasting, “Corona came, it was locked down. I got 20 more girls online. We scaled that back up to $300,000 or $400,000 a month.”

According to Tate, his method relied on creating emotional dependency. “There’s no such thing as having girls who work for you who you’ve not f***ed,” he claimed. “You have to f* them, and they have to love you. It’s essential to the business.”

Tate also admitted to using intimidation to maintain control. In one instance, he recounted smashing a room after a woman allegedly withheld money, stating, “I went to the room, smashed the room up, told her I knew what she did. She sent me all the money.”

Tate's statements have sparked widespread condemnation, as they align with allegations against him in Romania. Prosecutors have charged him with rape, human trafficking, and forming an organized crime group. Despite the charges, Tate dismissed the notion of being a victim or facing consequences for his actions. “You treat me like a victim, but I didn’t tell you I’m a victim,” he said.

The transcript highlights the calculated exploitation of women, a practice Tate openly admitted was motivated solely by financial gain. “I don’t give a s*** about having sex with beautiful women,” he stated. “I f* them so they listen to me, so I can get what I actually want, which is not them.”

His Recruitment Strategy

In another video widely circulated online, Tate detailed his approach to recruiting women into webcam work, describing a system he called the "PhD course."

“You cannot get a girl to work for you having [not] fucked,” Tate began, explaining that the recruitment process starts on Instagram. “The PhD course is my recruitment system. I don't mention webcam until after I've had sex with the girl,” he stated. He dismissed the idea of bringing up webcam work during initial dates, claiming, “It puts them off. I'd never do that. That's disgusting.”

Tate elaborated that after establishing a sexual relationship, he conducts what he called a "PhD test" to gauge the woman's willingness to join his business. “You fuck the girl. After you fuck the girl, you do the PhD test. If she passes the PhD test and she wants to be with you, then you start mentioning things like, yeah, but you know, you're always busy. You're always at work. You can come work for me.”

He warned against directly propositioning women for webcam work without this process. “Hi, do you want to webcam? It's bullshit. It doesn't work. No one's gonna say yes,” he said. Tate argued that women motivated solely by money are more likely to cause problems. “Any girl who wants money that bad is gonna skank you and leave you when she realizes you get a big cut of it.”

Tate described a scenario where he introduces women to an experienced webcam worker, or as he referred to her, his “balling bitch,” to convince the new recruit. “The girl has to hear it from a girl,” he explained. He credited his success to his first recruit, saying, “My first girl was so good. It was easy. My girl said, ‘Oh my God, before this, I was a waitress. And it was shit. And now I do this. I make so much money.’”

In one particularly graphic section of the video, Tate outlined a strategy involving alcohol to ease the transition into webcam work. “Put both girls on camera together the first day. Give them a bottle of vodka. Put on the fucking chatterbait. A hundred tokens per shot. The guys will send loads of money to get the girls drunk. Because guys like drunk girls.”

Tate concluded the video by advising against alternative recruitment methods. “That's how you recruit girls. Do not recruit girls any other way.”

Teaching Men to Isolate Women

In the leaked "War Room" footage released by The Daily Dot, 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. 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."

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.”

His associate 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.

Violent Comments

In another video, Tate describes actions he refers to as "basic moves of pimping," detailing physical violence and coercive behavior toward women.

“They didn’t teach you in self-defense. Here’s a little move. When I grab you by your neck and you start annoying me trying to resist, and I just, and then I grab you by your neck again,” Tate says at the start of the clip.

The video, which spans over a minute, escalates into increasingly graphic language. “Then what the fuck are you gonna do when your face is collapsed and your fucking cheekbone’s broken? You ain’t gonna do shit, but cry. I guarantee I changed the way you look at sex forever. You’re going to be fucking crying,” Tate continues.

Tate appears to taunt the hypothetical subject further, dismissing their resistance. “You’re saying I wouldn’t cry. You’re challenging me to a fight. You’re saying I can’t hurt you. You’re out of your fucking mind,” he says, before suggesting that physical assault could occur without sexual interaction. “Forget the sex part. That’s a distraction. My dick can stay in my pants. I’ll just start beating the shit out of you.”

At one point, Tate references what he calls “pimp school,” claiming that his behavior is a practiced strategy. “I perfected this in pimp school. When I got my PhD, we had to practice. If a girl comes at you, ‘ah, ah, you cheated, you cheated,’ it’s bang out the boom in her face and then grip her up by the neck. But shut up, bitch.”

He concludes with this: “Her panties get wet. Machete’s on the floor. Her panties are all wet. You go, fuck her. That’s how it goes. Slap, slap, grab, choke, shut up, bitch, sex. These are the basic moves of pimping.”

His "Business Tactics"

In another video, Tate detailed controversial methods he employed in his online business, describing how he and his team allegedly manipulated clients. The footage sheds light on Tate’s approach to running webcam operations, which he has discussed in previous interviews.

Tate begins by describing frustrations with the women involved in his operation, claiming they were ineffective at their roles. "So I’m trying to teach these women, and the women kept messing it up," he says. "So I said to them, you know what? Forget it. I’m taking over."

Tate explains that he unplugged the women's keyboards and substituted them with fake ones while he, his brother, and trained staff took over the conversations behind the scenes. "The chicks would sit there and hit a keyboard that wasn’t plugged in," he said. "Me and my brother and eventually some staff I trained would do all the talking."

According to Tate, the women were primarily tasked with being the visual draw, while the team exploited the clients' emotional vulnerabilities to extract large sums of money. "The girls were just laughing, with their bodies out, while we were taking their money—all of it," he claims.

Tate further asserts that his operation capitalized on men’s naivety, stating, "Women haven’t got a clue how to manipulate a dude. They rely on their looks; they don’t have the intellect or game." He adds that he and his team leveraged this supposed knowledge gap to push clients into extreme financial decisions, such as selling their houses or draining their life savings.

When asked if he felt remorse for his actions, Tate’s response was blunt. "Do I feel bad? No. Not a solitary fuck. I don’t give a fuck."

His Webcam Business

In another video, Tate addressed criticism surrounding his past involvement in the webcam business, apparently seeking to clarify the timeline of events and his current activities.

"They try and attack my morality, right?" Tate said, referring to criticism he has received for his exploitative tactics. "They say all he did, he had something to do with the webcam girls a long time ago. It's my webcam company, things that happened ten years ago, and that was a past life. We're talking about something that happened ten years ago. Do you do that still? I haven't touched it for a very long time—seven years, eight to nine years," he asserted.

While addressing claims that he continues to profit from the industry, Tate admitted he had scaled operations up briefly during the pandemic. "When corona came, I scaled it back up, right? I got a bunch—I got 20 more girls online. We scaled that back up to three or four hundred thousand dollars a month." However, he noted that his involvement had ceased, save for a small, select group. "I'm just gonna keep like five or six of my main girls."

Tate also rejected accusations of dishonesty about his past, calling lying a "very feminine" trait. "I have not been involved with it for seven years. It's not how I make money," he insisted. "I haven't lied about anything. It was that long ago. It was about ten years ago."

Throughout the video, Tate sought to frame the criticism as disproportionate. "I'm being told I'm the worst person in the world by people who pretended they'd never done anything wrong for the last ten years," he concluded.

The video appears to be an attempt to address recurring scrutiny about his past while reaffirming his false claims of having moved on from the webcam business.

The Myth of Andrew Tate’s “Reformation”

One of the most persistent defenses of Tate is that he’s a “reformed” man—someone who admits to his past mistakes (ahem, alleged sex trafficking) but has since left his problematic behaviors behind to pursue a life of virtue and guidance for young men. This narrative, however, quickly crumbles when examined. Not only does Tate’s on-camera rhetoric contradict his claims of being a changed man, but he’s also been repeatedly caught blatantly lying about his criminal cases.

Tate’s defenders insist he’s on a better path, but why would we actually believe that since whenever Tate discusses his legal troubles or past behavior, he consistently downplays, deflects, or outright fabricates the facts?

“I stopped my webcam business 7–10 years ago.”

Tate often claims in interviews that he walked away from his webcam business nearly a decade ago, framing it as a distant chapter of his life. The reality? His webcam operations were still active until his arrest in 2022. He even admitted to scaling up the business during the pandemic, boasting about recruiting more women and raking in $300,000 to $400,000 per month. This is corroborated by evidence in his indictment.

“I was barely involved in the webcam business.”

Another frequent claim is that Tate played only a minor role in running the business, leaving most of the operations to others. Yet, there’s endless footage of him describing in detail how he managed every aspect of the operation, including controlling the women, taking large (or sometimes all) cuts of the profits, and orchestrating every interaction with clients. Verified chats and evidence cited in the indictment back this up.

“The Loverboy method is just about being nice.”

Tate downplays the “Loverboy” method he’s charged with, describing it as a benign strategy for building relationships. In reality, the Loverboy method is a known human trafficking tactic that involves manipulating someone into believing they are loved, only to coerce them into prostitution or illegal activities. It’s a technique commonly associated with human trafficking.

“The case is all about TikTok.”

Tate has tried to trivialize the charges against him by suggesting they’re focused solely on TikTok content. This is false. The indictment includes evidence from multiple platforms, including TikTok, webcamming, and OnlyFans. The scope of the case is far broader and far more serious than he implies.

“None of my self-snitching videos are being used as evidence.”

Another bold claim is that none of the videos where Tate openly describes his exploitative methods are being used against him. This is demonstrably false. Many of his own words, captured on video, are explicitly quoted in the indictment and are being used as evidence in the case.

“The cases only go back to 2021.”

Tate frequently claims that his legal troubles are recent and politically motivated. However, the cases against him date back to 2012 in the UK and 2016 in Romania, long before his rise to fame.

“They dug into my past and found nothing.”

Tate insists that investigations into his past have turned up no wrongdoing. This is a blatant lie. Again, he's currently facing three criminal trials (two in Romania, and one in the UK) and a civil trial in the UK. These involve at least 10 victims of rape and sexual assault, along with dozens of human trafficking victims. The allegations are severe, including charges of statutory rape and long-term coercion.

If this is the person some claim is “reformed,” one has to wonder: What exactly are they willing to overlook in the name of defending him? Tate’s pattern of deception and exploitation does not indicate a changed man but someone who will do or say anything to avoid accountability.

Wait, There's More?

And while I’d love to say these are all of his vile tweets and statements, the truth is that there are simply too many to fit within a reasonably sized article. But as any normal person can see, there are more than enough examples to make it clear why right-wing and red-pill engagement chasers need to finally let this one die. Here are a few more from the last few weeks and months, but this is barely scratching the surface.

Closing Thoughts: The Right Should Not Embrace These People

I’m honestly pretty annoyed that I even have to say this, but conservatives and Christians should not be supporting or defending Andrew Tate.

Whether it’s a strategy for clicks or a warped view of what healthy masculinity looks like—you're not actually helping anyone when you feed into his ego, and you're certainly not helping your own credibility.

Tate's words, actions, and criminal charges paint an unambiguous picture of someone who exploits and degrades others for personal gain. There’s no excuse for overlooking that, especially for people who claim to uphold moral values.

Defending or downplaying Tate's weaknesses is a horrendous look, and it’s a quick and unnecessary way to destroy your own credibility in the process.

There are many ways to promote strong, virtuous masculinity without aligning yourself with someone who has repeatedly proven himself to be unrepentant and deceptive. It’s time to stop pretending there’s any honor or redemption in elevating him as a role model. At this point, there's only shame.