My older brother is 36 and has followed PUA websites since around the age of 21. He's recently moved back to live with my dad who's having issues dealing with him - a local bar has just banned my brother as he keeps antagonising regulars. Apparently my brother gives regulars rude lectures on their dating life and careers saying they're too nice etc etc. I'm getting some emails from both my dad and school friends who still live there because of his 'in your face' behaviour and I've had it with this.
He used to be great to be around and had had a couple of long term gfs, plus was a social butterfly. Then he had this bad experience with a girl in his sophomore year in college who cheated on him and he ended up reading PUA self help books. We went to the same college - pretty soon after that I stopped clubbing with him because if he wasn't pissing women off with his obvious PUA 'tactics', he'd be lecturing me instead, telling me all women were all 'money grabbing sluts'.
Back then I tried reasoning with him and explaining that one bad experience doesn't speak for all dating experiences, but his arguing was unreal - changing subject, stonewalling, jumping on anecdotal evidence etc etc. It's now at the point where me and my sister, plus our SOs, have cut him out due to the scenes he's caused at gatherings and my dad is considering options finding alternative accomodation for him. Not that I'd keep score or cared but while he hasn't had any long term gfs since college, I've never followed any sexist PUA stuff about 'being a cock', yet dated successfully and am now happily married.
I was discussing it with a friend from school and we reckon my brother let it go to his head when he was a social butterfly in high school and just stopped developing. I hear through the grapevine that he still gets one night stands, which he probably sees as evidence of his PUA theories being accurate - the reality is that he's fairly physically fit by any standards so women come up to him, but once they get to know him they don't stay long. Also the times I've seen him get with women he just chilled out and cut the PUA crap out, something he never notices and that I've raised in the past to no avail (unfortunately cutting the PUA out was rare).
My friend's suggestion is that rather than just telling him PUA is wrong to give him some sort of training in statistics like psychologists get, so he at some point he can see for himself that he's wrong, or to get him to do CBT, which focuses on evidence base aswell. I just wonder given that he's held onto these views into his 30s if he will give it real thought. There seem to be some saving grace in that he doesn't appear to have gone to the lengths of joining MRA groups and seems to supports equal rights (many people on the websites he visits don't) but I really wonder if I can get through.
What do others think? Unfortunately it looks like I can't ignore this any more - have you any experience showing to someone like this that they're blinkered and of getting through to them?