Use of 'Groomer' Hate Speech Spiked on Twitter After Colorado Springs Nightclub Shooting, Montclair State University Study Shows

Findings points to impact of CEO Musk's 'general amnesty' on the social media platform

Montclair, NJ (12/01/2022) — A new study by the Joetta Di Bella and Fred C. Sautter III Center for Strategic Communication in the School of Communication and Media at Montclair State University points to what hate speech on Twitter could look like following Elon Musk's offer of "general amnesty" to suspended accounts on the platform.

Specifically, the study showed a dramatic spike in the use of the term "grooming" (a slur used against the LGBTQ+ community) on Twitter in the period after the shooting at an LGBTQ+ nightclub in Colorado Springs, Colorado, on November 19-20. (See key findings below).

How 'groomer' is misused as an anti-LGBTQ slur

"Grooming," as defined by the Rape, Abuse and Incest National Network (RAINN), is "manipulative behaviors that the abuser uses to gain access to a potential victim, coerce them to agree to the abuse, and reduce the risk of being caught."

Historically, it's been used as a dehumanizing slur to target, criminalize and ostracize the marginalized LGBTQIA+ community through the construction of fictional predators harming youth. Two contemporary events - the QAnon conspiracy and the discourse surrounding Florida's "Parental Rights in Education" bill (popularly known as "Don't Say Gay") - echo this messaging.

As the danger of the term was more understood, social media platforms began to limit its use, including restrictions on Twitter which banned the use when directed at trans and non-binary people as an anti-LGBTQ+ slur. However, when Elon Musk took over as CEO of the platform, promising a reduction in "woke" restrictions on expression, users on the site anticipated a reduction in these sorts of constraints and an opportunity to more openly share hate content.

Highlights from the study on the use of the term "grooming" on Twitter:

The data collected demonstrates the tensions that Twitter will navigate between content restriction and platform openness.

"We all understand the importance of freedom of speech, but there are dangers to running platforms like Twitter as a 'free speech absolutist,'" said Bond Benton, associate professor in the School of Communication and Media. "It is troubling that every time there is a hate-fueled crime, those with extreme views may remain unchecked and will and have a place to spread hate speech and associated terms that demonstrate a lack of common sense, decency and compassion."

The Montclair study was conducted by faculty Bond Benton, Yi Lu, Jin-A Choi, Keith Strudler and Keith Green from the Joetta Di Bella and Fred C. Sautter III Center for Strategic Communication, which provides social media analytics tools and training for faculty and students for classroom learning and research projects.

For more information or to set up an interview, contact the Media Relations team at Montclair State University.

###

Montclair State University is a research doctoral institution ranked in the top tier of national universities. Building on a distinguished history dating back to 1908, the University today has 10 colleges and schools that serve more than 21,000 undergraduate and graduate students with more than 300 doctoral, master's and baccalaureate programs. Situated on a beautiful, 252-acre suburban campus just 12 miles from New York City, Montclair State delivers the instructional and research resources of a large public university in a supportive, sophisticated and diverse academic environment.