I heard the report on NPR, yeah. I haven't been around these conversations in years but the rhetoric - the danger, the horror, the victimization, the abuse, the trauma - I see it as a wedge into the identity politics that dominate politics discourse. The rightwing does it, Christians do it, etc.: portray themselves as victimized by some dominant other in society in order to claim legitimate political beef. What Wendy Brown calls a politics of victimization or ressentiment where the only way to get taken seriously is to show that society has so damanged and tramautized you and your identity group, you're powerless in the face of those who control the system. Much to do with Americans binary understanding of power: you either have it/ or you don't.
Also see it as a bit of anti-feminist posturing among some of the rhetoric I saw. When these guys would show up in the feminist blogosphere, they'd want to take center stage to discuss *their* trauma and make feminists understand that they deserved to be heard too. *They* were traumatized, suffering PTSD, their lives stunted by the event at age 1 day, carrying around the scars and pain since nearly the day they were born, etc. etc. They'd talk about undergoing therapy to relive the event and heal, etc. This was from the MRA - men's rights activist - crowd. *shrug*