Welcome to our community

Be apart of something great, join today!

Minnesota assasination thread

  • Thread starter Thread starter altmin
  • Start date Start date
  • Replies: 638
  • Views: 14K
  • Politics 
There was video of Luigi. It was a more dramatic hit, as it took place on the street in NYC. Luigi was attractive and something of a heart-throb.
dude, come on.

the MN killer wore a mask, dressed up like a cop and drove a fake police cruiser, evaded multiple actual cops at multiple scenes, murdered multiple people, tried to murder several others, had an extensive hit list and like luigi was at large for some time after the murders.

that is PLENTY dramatic. don't make excuses for the bullshit media coverage and sanewashing of extreme right wing political violence.
 
dude, come on.

the MN killer wore a mask, dressed up like a cop and drove a fake police cruiser, evaded multiple actual cops at multiple scenes, murdered multiple people, tried to murder several others, had an extensive hit list and like luigi was at large for some time after the murders.

that is PLENTY dramatic. don't make excuses for the bullshit media coverage and sanewashing of extreme right wing political violence.
I'm not making excuses. I just thought I'd throw those out as factors. I think you're underestimating the function of the sex appeal here. Good looking people will ALWAYS get more media coverage than similarly situated ugly people.

Also, Luigi was in the news because he was relatable. On this message board and elsewhere: people were saying, "I don't support the violence but good riddance to United Health care bastards." Like, everyone can relate to Luigi's anger at insurance companies, and also their rich executives. So Luigi came across as something of a romantic hero, not Robin Hood but adjacent, not Che but adjacent.

I don't know. The media sanewashed Trump throughout 2024, but they weren't losing hype for it. I don't see any reason why the media would have any interest in suppressing a story that would generate tons of ratings and attention.
 
Nick Sortor,
Seen on @TuckerCarlson Tonight, Fox News, Newsmax, Timcast, etc.

There's the problem.
These bastards will literally say or do anything to avoid admitting that the killer was one of theirs, and that the murders were motivated by right-wing obsessions and hatreds - hatred of pro-choice groups and politicians, hatred of the LGBTQ community, fundamentalist Evangelical Christian dogma, and so on. Somehow, in some way, these murders and shootings have GOT to be the fault of liberals and Democrats, and they simply won't believe or accept anything else.
 
Last edited:
At least Nick found his calling. It sure as hell wasn’t real estate sales.
"I decided to become a realtor after working for years as an executive in the finance industry, and I made this career change for single reason: I found that one of the most gratifying feelings in life is helping people find not just a house, but a home."

😆😆😆
 
Killer is just a straight up wacko with voices telling him that Walz wanted him to carry out the killings. It might help him avoid the death penalty.
 
Why would he listen to Walz? He’s clearly a right-wing nut bag on your side of the political spectrum, so I doubt he’d take any commands from Walz, perceived or not.
Maybe for the same reason the Son of Sam killer claimed to have listened to the dog next door. Trying for an insanity plea.
 

Mike Lee has in recent years become one of the Senate’s most prolific social media posters, his presence seen in thousands of posts, often late at night, about politics. Fellow senators have grown accustomed to the Utah Republican’s pugnacious online persona, mostly brushing it off in the name of collegiality.

That is, until this past week.

His posts, after the June 14 fatal shooting of a Minnesota lawmaker and her husband, incensed Lee’s colleagues, particularly senators who were friends with the victims. It all added to the charged atmosphere in the Capitol as lawmakers once more confronted political violence in America.

As the Senate convened for the week, Sen. Tina Smith, D-Minn., marched past a crowd of reporters and headed toward the Senate floor: “I can’t talk right now, I have to go find Sen. Lee.”

Smith, whose name was listed in the suspected shooter’s notebooks recovered by law enforcement officials, spoke to Lee for several minutes. The next day, Sen. Amy Klobuchar, D-Minn., did the same. By midday Tuesday, Lee had deleted his tweets.

“I would say he seemed surprised to be confronted,” Smith later told reporters.
 
Back
Top