410 Million Men
Approximately 410 million men died from systematic violence and extraction across the century (1920-2025)—deaths from war, genocide, workplace exploitation, and structural violence.
Six Categories of Systematic Violence:
- War & Genocide: Combat deaths, civilian casualties, systematic genocide (peaked in WWII)
- Workplace Deaths: Industrial accidents, mining disasters, agricultural deaths, construction fatalities
- Suicide: Rising across the century, especially in recent decades
- Homicide: Systematic violence and murder
- Mining & Industrial Deaths: Extraction-related fatalities
- Forced Labor: Deaths in labor camps, prisons, slavery-like conditions
These deaths represent 23.4% of all preventable deaths in the century.
Total Men's Deaths
Breakdown by Category of Violence
The Pattern of Male Extraction
War deaths peaked in 1940s (19,000/day during WWII) but remain substantial—showing how male elites use other men as instruments of domination.
Workplace deaths persist throughout the century despite safety improvements—revealing ongoing extraction of male labor in dangerous conditions.
Suicide rates rising in recent decades—the modern alienation pattern emerging as traditional structures collapse without alternatives.
This is not "men vs. women." This is elite systems extracting from ALL demographics through different mechanisms.
See complete sources and historical documentation
View Complete Methodology