“I don’t know why women think hardware and tool stores are only for men…”
A TikTok creator named @menmasteringmasculinity (a manosphere account that operates in the red pill corner of the platform) recently posted a video of himself getting out of a car at the Port Freight Terminal in Severner Park, Maryland, near Washington, D.C., showing off the various knee braces on display, and then noted that he claimed to have ordered a Western Safety rolling knee brace.
“Stop at the old port freight station,” he said. “Looking for some of these for my wife, but then I saw [the rolling knee pads] And then I was like, wow. Never knew. But still had to order. “
The caption read: “You can find some very innovative tools and accessories to help around the house. I don’t know why women think hardware and tool stores are only for men, clearly they are designed for women!”
Knee pads “designed specifically for women”: a stupid move
Of course, knee braces are unisex and are commonly used in gardening, flooring, construction work and any other physical work. There is no gender difference in them. What is documented, and what the creators clearly intended to document, is the frame: a knee brace sought “for my wife”, delivered without instructions for use.
There are two possible interpretations of this meaning, neither of which is flattering. Either way women work alone on their knees – a sex-reducing domestic chore that is in sync with the misogynistic club energy.
But judging by the tone, it’s more likely that he was hinting at something sexual and part of a misogynistic strategy. Non-specific promotion is the key. Specious denial is a favorite tool of red pill creators, a mechanism for belittling (or often suppressing) women while maintaining a posture of innocence. After all, he was probably there to buy something for his wife.
His handle declares its allegiance in no uncertain terms. The account occupies the ground floor of the vast Manoosphere ecosystem—it doesn’t have many followers, and his videos hint at the intrigue of complex topics that he doesn’t fully understand. But it all feeds into a larger institution that creates a strange disdain for women.
Accounts like his function as tributaries, carrying slightly diluted versions of ideologies popularized by the figures who built the industrial complex of misogyny to fully monetize it. For the bigger influencers, it’s filled with course packs, supplemental affiliate codes, and sportsbook recommendations.
Let’s see what people say.
Peanut Gallery assesses findings from port freight customers
Well, there’s really nothing about that. One person commented using three sweaty, laughing emojis, suggesting the message was a bit risky. Also, to be fair, he’s not one to seek out followers or do all the things you need to do to find them.
The pipeline is the product
The reach of the Mano Circle is well-documented and continues to grow, especially in times of economic downturn. I don’t mean the stock market; I mean, that’s what’s happening on the ground as the country’s job market and inflation decline.
A 2025 Common Sense Media survey of more than 1,000 U.S. boys aged 11 to 17 found that 73% regularly encountered masculinity-related content online. Nearly a quarter experienced high exposure levels. Boys who spent the most had lower self-esteem and higher levels of emotional suppression.
In her book Breaking the Boy Code, child psychotherapist Dr. Katie Hurley details that the pipeline of hate toward women (and other fear-based concepts) rarely begins with outright hatred. It started with fitness videos, beauty tips, and mundane errands (like shipping freight to the local port) that these influencers turned into content. It then progresses into more corrosive frameworks about gender, race, and social hierarchies.
A jingoistic prosperity gospel trickles down from top influencers, but the money is slowly siphoned off. Smaller creators copy this ethos for free, serving as unpaid foot soldiers in an economy they can never profit from.
AllHipHop reached out to @menmasteringmasculinity via TikTok DMs and comments and Harbor Freight via email. We will update this story if either party responds.
@menmasteringmasculinity You can find some very innovative tools and accessories to help around the house. I don’t know why women think hardware stores and tool stores are only for men, clearly they are designed for women! #h #harborfreightk #kneepadsb #bestworko #overtimeb #bluecollarworker ♬ Original Sound – @MasculineEdge

