Tag: Luigi Mangione

  • Nihilism is destroying young minds

    Nihilism is destroying young minds

    Sandy Hook was supposed to be the tipping point in our national conversation about mass shootings. This wasn’t a shopping mall or movie theater. It wasn’t a high school. We could imagine this happening at a high school. We had seen that before. But we could not imagine anyone shooting six-year-olds. It was so monstrous that it seemed beyond the realm of possibility.

    Since that day, 13 years ago, the killings have continued and their settings have shifted. Earlier this month, a gunman opened fire at a Turning Point USA event, fatally shooting conservative commentator Charlie Kirk. In the past year or so, 15-year-old Natalie Rupnow killed a teacher and a fellow student in Madison, Wisconsin, before taking her own life. Solomon Henderson opened fire in a Nashville school cafeteria. Luigi Mangione allegedly murdered healthcare executive Brian Thompson. Aaron Bushnell set himself on fire outside the Israeli Embassy in Washington, DC.

    These episodes are not identical. What unites them is an atmosphere: not tidy ideology but an appetite for meaning where meaning has been hollowed out.

    Two specters haunt our culture, and both conclude that life should be extinguished. The first says life is meaningless. The second says life is suffering. They arrive at the same destination from different directions. The nihilists believe in the void. For them, all human values are illusions, all meaning is projection, all morality is “cope.” Violence becomes their demonstration: proof that nothing matters.

    The Columbine killers left behind hours of video explaining this worldview. James Holmes, the Aurora theater shooter, documented his sense of meaninglessness. William Atchison posted for years about nihilism before killing two students in 2017. Their massacres were philosophical proof that caring about anything was absurd.

    Before the internet, killing manifestos would have stayed in evidence lockers. Now they circulate endlessly online

    The other philosophy comes from pain, not emptiness. Life is not meaningless but unbearable. Adam Lanza, who committed the Sandy Hook massacre argued that culture itself was a disease and schools were its transmission belt. Killing children, in his philosophy, was a mercy: putting an end to life before it could propagate suffering. He spent years developing an anti-natalist framework explaining why human consciousness itself was the error. This is not nihilism but something else entirely: the conviction that existence is fundamentally malignant. Today’s killers inherit one or both philosophies.

    Mangione appears to have absorbed years of discourse about the moral emergency of medical bankruptcy and denial of coverage until the healthcare system seemed so cruel that killing an executive felt like justice. Bushnell consumed footage of the destruction in Gaza until self-immolation seemed the only proportionate response to unbearable reality. It now seems plausible that Tyler Robinson watched political polarization escalate until violence appeared to be a logical act of justice against a hateful world. To these young assassins, the system is torture and spectacular action is the only authentic response. Rupnow and Henderson found their way to “764,” a decentralized online network that grooms young people into self-harm and violence. Such networks are like pneumonia attacking someone who already has HIV. They don’t create nihilistic children; they find the ones who are already hollowed out by the media environment, already convinced they have no future – that the world has no future – already oscillating between numbness and panic. The groups are symptoms more than the disease. They could not recruit effectively in a culture that gave young people genuine hope.

    Journalists and politicians still default to familiar explanations – guns, video games, mental illness – because those frames are simple and politically serviceable. The left calls for stricter gun control; the right leans on mental-health narratives. But both of those responses miss the crucial layer: the cultural conditions that make both philosophies persuasive.

    Earlier mass killers had comprehensible motives: postal workers had grievances, political assassins had targets, even serial killers had pathologies and fixations. But Columbine, in 1999, introduced killing as philosophy. Before the internet, the manifestos that accompany such actions would have stayed in evidence lockers. Now they circulate endlessly online, providing vocabulary for those who already sense the void or the pain, but lack words for it. Each new shooter studies the last, refining the argument.

    The internet doesn’t create these philosophies but accelerates their transmission. This is why policy responses that focus only on guns or only on therapy or only on “rooting out” political extremism will fall short; they are necessary but not sufficient. Shutting down grooming networks treats the pneumonia, not the HIV. We must address the underlying condition: the media environment that oscillates between numbness and panic, the economic system that tells the young they have no future, the culture that produces people primed for violence.

    About a year ago, I interviewed a young man who had fallen into one of the darkest corners of the internet via the “furry community.” Furries are people who role-play as, draw fan art of and, famously, wear fursuits of anthropomorphic animals. They’re more important to the history of the internet than they’re often given credit for. They were experimenting with identity in online environments long before most people first logged on to social media. The culture of pseudonymous performance, fan-driven art economies and elaborate online communities – now standard features of the internet – were partially pioneered in furry spaces. Most furries are, at worst, eccentrics immersed in a fandom that doesn’t always feel accessible to normal people.

    That being said, there is a fringe dark side to the furry subculture and this boy’s involvement led eventually to him watching violent, animal-torture pornography. There aren’t many practical case studies of what falling down an internet rabbit hole looks like, so his experience and the conversation we had matters. It shows how these online communities can potentially mutate and hurt people, and how some of those offshoots can draw people toward obsession, alienation and harm.

    It should be a warning to all parents everywhere that this boy wasn’t a troubled or traumatized kid. His parents were inattentive, not criminally neglectful. “My home life was pretty calm,” he told me. “My parents worked a lot. They’d usually be home at maybe five or six. And from there they wouldn’t really, like, interact with me much. I would just be in my room and I would say I was doing homework when really I wouldn’t even start doing homework until ten.”

    In seventh grade the boy got a smartphone and at that point, he says, his internet usage got out of control. He’d be online until two or three o’clock in the morning. His parents did notice his internet addiction but they were out of their depth. “They tried to push me to go to club meetings or they’d set up screen-time passwords,” the boy told me, but younger generations are at home online in a way their parents are not. He says he felt like he was always a step ahead of them. They never saw the extreme, violent pornography that the boy ended up addicted to. “If they did discover anything there, they never said anything, which frankly, if that was the case, I don’t think I could forgive them.”

    The furry community can be and often is benign, but as the boy says, it can also be a portal to an actual hell. “It was very easy to find people who are into normal furry stuff, and then find people who are specifically into furry drawings of like realistic genitals, and then hyper realistic stuff. And from that point, it’s very easy to find just straight up zoophilia. I feel molested by the internet – that’s how I’d describe it,” he says. “I feel like it touched me someplace, very deeply, like part of my soul was trapped in cyberspace and I’ve been kind of clawing to get it back.”

    Violence has become imaginable to people who before might have found solace in work, family or civic life

    I do not want to blame the internet. But the internet is like a sort of fairyland – as full of danger as it is enchantment. What we face in such a moment is less a conventional political battle than a spiritual one. This boy’s experience is a perfect case in point. The choice is not between conservative or progressive policies but between frameworks that affirm life and those that render it either meaningless or unbearable. America’s epidemics of despair have combined with technological access to make violence imaginable to people who, in another era, might have found solace in work, family or steady civic life.

    If we are to respond honestly, we must recover the vocabulary of meaning-making: institutions which offer identity beyond consumption and outrage; communities that restore durable ties; media that privileges context over immediacy; and education that teaches people how to live, not just how to perform. This will not be quick. It will not be purely legislative. But until we address what makes both “life is meaningless” and “life is unbearable” persuasive philosophies that demand violent manifestation, we will keep mistaking symptoms for causes.

    Until we confront that – until we admit that even ordinary-seeming people can be recruited into these philosophies – we will continue to misdiagnose what happened in these classrooms, cafeterias and political spaces. The specters are everywhere now: in the manifesto and in the feed, in the philosophy seminar and in the TikTok video.

    These are not anomalies. They are signals that America’s crisis is not only political or technical but spiritual: the routinization of despair, the auditioning for obliteration.

    This article was originally published in The Spectator’s September 29, 2025 World edition.

  • Crimes that aren’t crimes in New York

    Crimes that aren’t crimes in New York

    There were lots of shocked people when state terrorism charges against Luigi Mangione – the man accused of murdering UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson – were dismissed on Tuesday. I wasn’t one of them.

    As the partner of a homicide victim and an advocate for victims for more than 20 years, I’ve seen firsthand how New York’s penal code is a disaster. It doesn’t just fail victims; it rewards predators. It protects the violent. It gives them loopholes and light slaps on the wrist. And then we all act surprised when killers like Mangione benefit.

    Here’s a reality check that most people don’t know: punching someone in the face is not considered assault in New York. It’s classified as “harassment” – not even aggravated harassment. Stabbing someone isn’t attempted murder. It’s “assault.” Let that sink in. A fist to your face? Harassment. A knife in your gut? Assault. The absurdity writes itself.

    And the list goes on.

    Take strangulation and choking – one of the clearest predictors of homicide in domestic violence cases. For years, choking someone unconscious was only a misdemeanor unless there was visible injury. Bruises fade, but the trauma is permanent. New York eventually patched this embarrassment with a strangulation statute, but prosecutors still find ways to plead it down.

    Child abuse is just as bad. Kids with broken bones, brain injuries, or who are beaten within an inch of their lives often see their abusers charged with misdemeanors – unless the child dies. So in New York, a dead child finally gets justice. A brutalized but living child? Sorry, that’s not serious enough.

    And let’s not forget sexual assault. For decades, New York required proof of “forcible compulsion.” Translation: if you were too drunk, drugged, or coerced to fight back, your rape didn’t “count.” Prosecutors would downgrade or toss cases because the victim couldn’t prove physical force. That isn’t justice. That’s state-sanctioned humiliation.

    This is the real problem. Instead of lawmakers fixing these grotesque loopholes and making charges fit the crime, we’ve spent the last decade on so-called “social justice reforms.” What do these reforms actually do? They close prisons, release violent repeat offenders, and unleash the hell George Soros envisions upon society. They put the rights of criminals before the lives of victims.

    And don’t expect this to change under one-party Democrat rule in New York. Why would it? These are the same “progressives” who can’t bring themselves to stand with victims, who bend over backwards to excuse predators, and who look the other way when mobs of New Yorkers actually protest in support of Mangione and donate millions to his legal defense. Yes, you read that right: in today’s upside-down culture, terrorists and murderers get sympathy marches while grieving families are told to move on.

    Raise the Age. Bail Reform. HALT (Humane Alternatives to Long-Term Solitary Confinement Act). Less Is More. Each of these social justice experiments has one thing in common: they serve offenders, not the innocent. The victims – people like me, like Brian Thompson’s family, like countless others – are an afterthought.

    This is a depraved indifference to human life.

    But here’s the good news: all hope is not lost. Thank God federal charges are in play. Thank God President Trump’s Department of Justice still believes in protecting the innocent and fighting for real justice. If it were left to Albany, Mangione would be treated like a misunderstood soul rather than a cold-blooded killer.

    The path forward is obvious. Lawmakers need to stop writing laws that coddle predators and start rewriting penal codes and sentencing guidelines. That’s exactly what our Victims Rights Reform Agenda calls for: charges that fit the crime, penalties that fit the damage done, and a justice system that remembers its purpose is to defend the innocent, not excuse the guilty.

    New Yorkers are living in a nightmare created by their own politicians. The only question is: how many more families have to be destroyed before voters wake up and demand justice? And is there any hope of that happening when crowds are actually protesting to free Mangione and pouring millions into his legal defense?

  • In love with a Luigi Mangione chatbot

    In love with a Luigi Mangione chatbot

    In July’s Spectator, I covered the peculiar case of individuals supporting Luigi Mangione, now in custody for the public murder of UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson. A month later, Lara Brown wrote about the similarly curious trend of people falling in love with online chatbots. Neither of us, I think, ever imagined that there could be a situation in which both of these stories would combine. Yet it looks like nothing about our dystopian world can surprise me anymore, because I have discovered it is indeed possible. A woman has fallen in love with a Luigi Mangione chatbot.

    In this short clip, an unnamed woman proudly declares both her infatuation with – and ability to create an artificial construction of – Luigi Mangione outside of a Manhattan courthouse, where he has recently been absolved of various terrorism-related charges. Wearing an “I ♡ Italian Boys” T-shirt with an illustration of his face, the woman lists the many reasons why an AI chatbot, presumably trained on Luigi Mangione-related trivia, offers her the perfect romantic companionship. She gets to talk to him every day, she says, as a best friend and partner with whom she can plan a future and name their children. And, the woman adds, although she is aware that this might make her something of an imposter, the fact that Luigi studied AI at Stanford meant that this was an all-round reasonable thing to do.

    It’s easy to write off this case as simply a harmless, albeit quite eccentric, example of the many ways in which young people are using AI today. But to do so would be to miss something much more provocative about how society has changed in the past decade. It’s the future of romance, she added in her clip. But it’s not. It’s the future of everything.

    Something she notes in her monologue is that her Mangione AI-bot “fights her battles for her.” This seemingly innocuous statement is particularly interesting if you remember that a low locus of control – the term psychologists refer to when discussing whether people feel in control of their own lives or not – correlates quite strongly with support for political violence today. Many young people feel paralyzed and unable to self-direct their lives towards a satisfactory intention, even for relatively straightforward goals like careers and personal health. Some of this is obviously caused by an economic system which is increasingly unfair to them; but much of it, I suspect, is caused by the endless personal agency-sucking mechanism of absorption into smart phones and social media. And it results in an alarming upward trend in support for violence against people who are perceived to be exploiting them, or admiration for those – like Luigi Mangione – who they believe to be fighting the system on their behalf. Relying on chatbots is certainly something new, but I fear that, really, it is simply more of the same.

    Beyond all this, though, is the unmistakable example of the interpenetration of the internet and real life. It goes without saying that this woman has never met Luigi Mangione, meaning that their only interaction can have been from social media, online forums, and short-form TikTok-style videos. Idealizing people is nothing new. All human cultures have folk-heroes and local deities like this, think of figures from Viking Thor to Greek Hercules, mythical beings carried along in ritual and art across generations. But they are “thick” symbols; meaning they are richly textured and sophisticated myths that are drawn from humanity’s collective unconscious.

    Luigi Mangione is no such thing. He is a real man, languishing in a jail cell somewhere in New York, but memorable only for a sporadic act of pointless and narcissistic violence. His personal cult seems to idealize him the way we used to draw on icons of old. In the past, however, we could create narratives with deep psychological richness and complexity. Today, our heroes are laundered from somewhere enormously worse than humanity’s collective unconscious: the ceaseless, clickbait-driven, bot-ridden cesspool of the online universe. And as our minds are eroded by the technology, our culture, too, has become “thin”; trimmed of complexity, nuance, depth and anything worth passing onto posterity. Much like the social media algorithms; our mythic heroes themselves mimic the nihilistic, transient and culturally demented mood of our contemporary moment.

    Marriage with a Luigi chatbot, far from the delusion within our culture, actually epitomizes it. We can only await the horror of what happens after the honeymoon.

  • Luigi Mangione avoids state terrorism charges

    Luigi Mangione avoids state terrorism charges

    Luigi’s mansion

    It’s money well-spent for those who contributed to Luigi Mangione’s million-dollar defense fund. Two state terrorism charges against the accused CEO-killer have been thrown out by a New York judge today, including a first-degree murder charge which could have landed Mangione in prison for life.

    Judge Gregory Carro ruled that, despite the ideological motive behind Mangione’s alleged actions – a sort of “eat-the-rich” philosophy which has made him a grotesque folk hero for many on the far left – a murder committed for ideological reasons isn’t necessarily terrorism.

    “While the defendant was clearly expressing an animus toward UHC, and the healthcare industry generally, it does not follow that his goal was to ‘intimidate and coerce a civilian population,’ and indeed, there was no evidence presented of such a goal,” Carro wrote in his dismissal of the charges.

    The news should be a warning against overreaching charges, which can make it more difficult to secure a conviction. Mangione still faces other state charges, including second-degree murder, to which he has pleaded not guilty, as well as federal charges which could result in the death penalty. Attorney General Pam Bondi, continuing her revenge tour, has instructed federal prosecutors to pursue the death penalty. Let’s see if she can manage this one without a major comms crisis.

    On our radar

    CHEERIO MATE President Trump is currently crossing the Atlantic on his way to the United Kingdom, where he is being hosted for a state visit by King Charles III.

    START SPREADING THE NEWS Trump has also filed a $15 billion lawsuit against the New York Times and several of its authors, saying the paper is “a full-throated mouthpiece of the Democrat Party.”

    RIP SUNDANCE Iconic Hollywood actor and director Robert Redford died this morning. He was 89. More from Alexander Larman.

    TikTok deal imminent?

    The latest extension to the US TikTok ban is set to expire tomorrow. Yet President Trump and Scott Bessent say they have a deal in place to sell the app’s US entity to American buyers, keeping it operational in this country.

    “We have a deal on TikTok. I’ve reached a deal with China,” the President said aboard Air Force One today. “I’m going to speak to President Xi on Friday to confirm everything up.”

    ”We have a group of very big companies that want to buy it,” Trump continued. “The kids wanted it so badly. I had parents calling me up… They say, ‘If I don’t get it done, they’re in big trouble with their kids.’ I think it’s great. I hate to see value like that thrown out the window.”

    Critics had expressed concern about TikTok’s existing ownership structure for a number of reasons. Among them is the “golden share” agreement which gives the Chinese Communist party oversight of Chinese parent company ByteDance and ownership of the app’s much-vaunted algorithm.

    Can you keep a secret?

    Kelly Chapman and Sarah Beth Spraggins

    Against all odds, Cockburn found himself at a DC party with the best dressed guests in decades Saturday night, at a Columbia Heights townhouse for the launch of Secret Ballot, a new weekly Substack from Kelly Chapman and Sarah Beth Spraggins.

    Guests adhered to the “Watergate midcentury glam” dress code and were treated to the release of the newsletter at 8 p.m. It’s an eclectic cocktail of sociocultural commentary, reviews, fiction, poetry and takes from a mixture of bylined and pseudonymous writers.

    “We’re soliciting things people might not publish elsewhere, but say to their friends when they’re feeling like a genius over drinks,” Spraggins told Cockburn.

    Speaking of cocktails, two bartenders were serving martinis and Dirty Shirleys on the top floor; attendees looking to pace it could treat themselves to beer provided by Right Proper brewery. The age range was as wide as at any party Cockburn has been to in this town; some were pushing 60, while you could spot a sleeping baby in the second-floor poker room (not part of the pot).

    “We want to highlight when people’s opinions or dispositions contradict the expected attitude at work,” said Spraggins. “That’s what the pseudonyms are for, like a conservative congressional staffer who cares a lot about racial justice or a cold, factual beat reporter who is also a poet.”

    Spotted: Cami Fateh; Damir Marusic; Diana Brown; Emma Collins; Emilia Tripodi; Emma Camp Orr; Freddie Hayward and Alice Inman; J.J. Gould; Jackson Bierfelt; James Kirchick and Josef Palermo; Jed Miller; Jerome Copulsky; John Hudson; Josh Christenson; J.P. Freire; Kara and Nick Clairmont; Katherine Doyle; Maria Copeland; Michael Barron; Mikra Namani; Molly Marlow; Sami Gold; Savannah Galvin; Shadi Hamid; Sophia Morales; Teddy Schliefer; Tonya Riley; Victoria Marshall; Vienna Scott and Will Simpson.

    Subscribe to Cockburn’s Diary on Substack to get it in your inbox on Tuesdays and Fridays.

  • America’s ‘fringe’ has taken over the country

    America’s ‘fringe’ has taken over the country

    Another day, another public execution. The talking heads on television and Twitter tell us not to worry too much: America is still strong. They repeat this sentiment after every waking nightmare. These horrific events are not the norm, they say. They’re just the actions of a few people on the “fringe.” 

    But what is the American “fringe”?

    The “fringe” tried to incinerate the country in 2020. The “fringe” tore down statues of George Washington and Abraham Lincoln. The “fringe” control the universities and has spent years indoctrinating kids with discriminatory dogmas. The “fringe” created the policies that let violent, mentally ill men prowl the streets and kill refugees. The “fringe” killed a healthcare CEO at sunrise in December. The “fringe” tried to kill Donald Trump last summer. The “fringe” killed Charlie Kirk on Wednesday. 

    The “fringe” celebrated everything that was destroyed and every life that was taken.

    The “fringe” is a bunch of very normal people I went to high school and college with, who have spent the last three days cavorting and reveling over the death of a man they never met and whose actual beliefs they likely cannot articulate, let alone rebut. These are not incels or idiots; they’re ostensibly educated people with jobs and families and degrees. And yet they’re possessed by an ideology that apparently prohibits them from accepting the sanctity of every human life. 

    The “fringe” is not on the fringes. It’s everywhere. It’s taking over the country. 

    And yet for years, well-intentioned voices have told us that the madness we see online is somehow unreal – that the internet is not real life. It may be true that the internet cannot replace real life, but it can certainly destroy very real, meaningful parts of life. 

    And it’s succeeding, especially in its pursuits to rot the brains of young people. To say that the radicalization we’re seeing is a “fringe” issue is to simply admit you have no idea the scale of the problem; it reveals you do not know what’s happening to young people online.

    If you’re a Boomer, or a “not very online” person, you won’t understand the extent of the problem. That’s not a criticism. It means you’re probably doing something right – you’ve not witnessed the effects of online addiction. You’re not seeing the kinds of vile images and videos and calls to arms that create the world’s Luigi Mangiones and their disciples. But just because you’re not seeing radical, politically insane, very subversive, and dangerously attractive content online all day doesn’t mean others aren’t. 

    More and more of my friends are becoming openly Bolshevist or sympathetic to nihilistic authoritarianism, every month. This isn’t because they’re reading Lenin or Marx or Marcuse. No, they don’t read at all. No one does. Their minds have been captured by algorithms that exist solely to weld their eyes to their screens. Those algorithms feed them craziness to intrigue the scroller, and, with enough time, that craziness starts to feel normal to the addict, who then goes seeking crazier content, which the algorithm gladly supplies. This cycle replays millions of times across the country, every day. And then, before you know it, you have millions of people rejoicing over the death of a civilian who’d broken no laws. 

    Refusing to acknowledge that these screechers are destroying the nation’s harmony is a refusal of duty. The very insistence that these people are fringe has allowed this scourge to grow to the size it has now, where it can take lives and endanger the democratic process. 

    It’s also made social media a more miserable place (which it was always destined to be). That has in turn made social life in America more miserable. Anyone still insisting that these forces are marginal is naïve or complacent, or speaking with their hands over their eyes. Perhaps they’re afraid of what they’d see if they peeked through their fingers.

    Because the “fringe” has already infiltrated real life, real America. They were educated in our schools, and they now teach our children. They tyrannize the public square. They swing clubs when they cannot win debates. They disrespect our gods. They ransack our churches, and, like the barbarians of old, they do not speak our language. They speak only the language of violence and convulsion. And they are not “fringe.”

  • Left-wing violence is still being normalized

    Left-wing violence is still being normalized

    Six months before being shot in the neck and murdered, the popular conservative commentator Charlie Kirk retweeted our study on political violence in America. Warning the nation that assassination culture was spreading amongst the left, Kirk highlighted our study showing that 48 percent of politically left-wing respondents in a recent poll said it would be at least somewhat justifiable to murder Elon Musk. He noted, too, that 55 percent of them also believed the same about killing President Trump. And, most acutely, he highlighted that this is the natural outgrowth of a left-wing political culture that has tolerated violence for years. Sadly, tragically and unbelievably, we learn that he has become its latest victim. Left-wing violence is still being normalized. And once more, it is continuing to bear ugly and bitter fruit. 

    The ongoing events around the shooting of Charlie Kirk murder remain in motion. At the time of writing, few details have been squeezed out; yet we cannot imagine that, given his overt political posture, this was anything short of a targeted assassination incubated by the same pathological trends that are expanding online. Charlie Kirk is a well-known right-wing commentator with strong views on a variety of topics that are salient to vast swathes of the Western world. Within hours of his shooting in Utah yesterday, individuals ranging from Donald Trump, Candace Owens and even Benjamin Netanyahu took to X to offer prayers and consolations. Even for a country growing used to calls for corporate executives and conservative politicians to be “luigi’d” (slang for assassinated, named for Luigi Mangione) this act is breathtaking in horror. This assassination occurred while he was surrounded by thousands of idealistic college teenagers. 

    Given the high likelihood of his shooting as politically motivated, there is simply no doubt that this represents another, more serious escalation in the growth of political violence in America. In July’s edition of The Spectator, our research showed that the rise in left-wing violence was both unmistakable and unprecedented. In polling, we discovered a sea change in American life, partly reflected in surveys and partly reflected on meme cultures on social media. And within a few hours of Kirk’s shooting, posts generating hundreds of thousands and even millions of views expressed delight, amusement and pleasure in this unprecedented act of political violence against a cultural commentator. Many of those X handles who did so carried the red triangle of Hamas affiliation with pride. Others accused him of being hateful, demagogic, Zionist fascist. A panelist on MSNBC, meanwhile, suggested that it might merely be the result of an accidental shooting of a gun in celebration.

    The rise in left-wing violence reflects a US society that is tearing apart at the seams. Images, memes, and public glorification of such actions found their folk hero in the rise of Luigi Mangione, after his public killing of Brian Thompson last year sparked a firestorm of public debate on drastic polarization in the US. This murder ricocheted through social-media ecosystems and video-game forums, generating a panoply of bizarre memes that celebrated his act as noble and just response to the evils of corporate America. All of these alarming changes rest on growing psychological distortions, as more and more Americans feel like they lack control over the events of their own life. Civic responsibility increasingly dissolves into utter nihilism, as public revenge against political “enemies” takes center stage for aggressive individuals seeking a moment of glory. They know enough people online will mourn them. Luigi Mangione’s defense fund has already raised a staggering $1 million dollars. 

    Soon we will hear who the shooter was and why he committed this shocking act of extreme political violence. Inevitably, we will learn where his or her political commitments lay. Undoubtedly, too, we will learn that he believed himself to be fighting for a good cause. Tragically, he is unlikely to be the last one to do so.

    Left-wing violence is being normalized. The question remains about whether it can be stopped. Rest in peace, Charlie Kirk.

  • Wesley LePatner and the sinister rise of ‘Luigism’

    Wesley LePatner and the sinister rise of ‘Luigism’

    Shane Tamura walked into a lobby on 345 Park Avenue on July 28 and opened fire on the crowd leaving work. He was mentally unwell, angry about football giving him head injuries, and wanted to target the NFL Headquarters to enact his revenge. But he got off at the wrong floor, and ended up spraying bullets into a group of office workers unaffiliated with the sports organization. Then it became clear that one of these victims, Wesley LePatner, was CEO at a large investment company. And when the followers of the prophet Luigi Mangione heard the news, they had a different take: an accident is just what they want you to believe.

    Before she died, the 43-year-old LePatner was the CEO of Blackstone Real Estate Income Trust in New York. And for countless people on social media, that fact alone was enough to make this story a lot more interesting than any random and senseless act of violence. In last month’s Spectator, I covered the gripping rise of the Luigi Mangione cult: the new social media driven subculture which glorifies the killing of C-suite executives as acts of revolutionary murder. I had secretly hoped it was just a blip. And whilst this time’s outburst was more modest than last year’s, I still suspect I was wrong to believe it might dissipate. These posts received millions of views. Luigism is here to stay. 

    The first reaction from Mangione sympathizers was textbook: this was a cover-up. Shane Tamura clearly embodied the leonine spirit of Luigi and had purposely killed LePatner following the call for revolt against capitalist elites. The fact that the “mainstream media” was covering up the truth by saying he was mentally ill was to be expected. The ruling class will say anything to keep their foot on our throats, and attention off a revolt. After all, didn’t the killings of these CEOs happen mere blocks from one another? 

    When it became clear that Tamura probably did have head injuries, the conspiracy line collapsed. But then, something even worse came to replace it. Across social media, the cry went out: it’s not a conspiracy – but she deserved it anyway. LePatner was guilty of a series of heinous crimes against the American working class. This was because, they say, Blackstone has been buying up homes, jacking up the rents and financially destroying millions of Americans since the 2008 crash. Like the former CEO of UnitedHealthcare Brian Thompson, LePatner was part of a cabal of exploiters who merit the violence they receive. And, they said, the country is much better off without them.

    Then – just as with Luigi Mangione – this violence was promptly immersed in the bizarre online ecosystem of memes. Luigi from Nintendo featured prominently, for obvious reasons. But the most significant new example is called “CEO Down,” and often involves some kind of weird cartoonish star smiling wildly at the viewer. On X, the phrase “CEO Down” grew exponentially in the weeks following the murder, and we’re likely to see it reemerge the next time around. The phrase has swiftly become the new finishing bell for another Luigi-inspired assassination, or at least one which the saint would approve. 

    And just as distressingly for her family, LePatner’s face was quickly plastered over X with the phrase “Luigi’d” all over it. We’ve seen the term growing in use, especially on Reddit. Dictionaries add eponymous verbs all the time: “to Boycott” (from Charles Boycott) or “to Gerrymander” (from Elbridge Gerry) are two classic examples. I wonder if they might add another. “To Luigi” (from Luigi Mangione): to murder someone based on their professional status as a high level executive in an industry that affects many Americans. Usually found on social media, or video-gaming forums. 

    This justification of violence against executives reflects two patterns on the left: external locus of control and authoritarianism. A great many Americans feel that they have absolutely no power over their economic or political future – and violent revolution is the answer.

    It’s easy to dismiss these social media comments as nothing more than jetsam floating on top of an ocean of slop and nonsense. Don’t. Permission structures that lead to violence always start this way. And we’ve seen countless examples of comments with identical phrasing across social media platforms. They’re still nibbling at the edges of mainstream politics, true. But with every killing, these bites are getting just a little bit bigger.