There are low IQ, avg IQ and high IQ schizophrenics. No correlation. Don’t care if books or movies were made for one or the other. |
It’s wild to see, it seems like he interacted with a lot of conservative media, but they don’t seem to mind because “he did something for the working class”. He also was someone who was never meant to be radicalized. He had all of the privilege in the world and rejected it and I think that is where the strange praise stems from. |
| Luigi hired an Altoona, PA-based attorney, Tom Dickey. Did he just pull out the yellow pages at the local jail? I hope this lawyer is good. |
| Do you think his mother knew it was him? I mean, she probably couldn’t quite bring herself to believe it, but a little nagging feeling ? |
Very likely. The family probably keeps up with news as well as we do. She must have seen the photos, probably didn’t want to believe it though. My heart hurts for her. |
+1 |
He’s been all over the news. Joe Pesci will play him in the movie. |
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Lots of disbelief- ppl think it’s a setup:
https://x.com/lawyerleew/status/1866607817534173479?s=46 |
Love the casting! |
And for Luigi’s love interest they should cast me. You know, to spice up the movie a bit. |
If you had filed with the police a missing persons report and then saw someone who looked like him on tv, what would you think? |
I also think a parent would know their child by their eyes, no question. |
And this one: https://x.com/peruvian_bull/status/1866213955687022656?s=46 Let me get this straight: Killer is Luigi Mangione, Ivy League grad with degrees in comp sci, avid reader and active contributor on GitHub. He has a 130+ IQ but he takes off his mask at a Starbucks to flirt with an employee, then an hour later goes and calmly kills the CEO of a major healthcare company, rides away on a bike. A week later goes to a local McDonalds where he brings the murder weapon, the fake ID he used to check into a hotel, and a written manifesto on how horrible the American healthcare system is. He somehow gets identified by the cashier after he sits down. He works on his laptop until police come inside the McDonalds, sitting there with a ghost gun and suppressor he made himself. Gotcha. |
Maybe he kept the gun to do himself in, but saw how much support he was getting and changed his mind. |
You are right. Idiots was too strongly worded. What I am trying to get at is that there have always been young people who latch onto various violent figures and look away or ignore the actual brutality perpetrated by those figures in favor of idealizing a message. It happens in every generation. The Unabomber still has a hold on a certain subset of kids in this generation, and Luigi Mangione is essentially this generation’s Unabomber. They see him as striking a blow against a system they hate and feel disaffected from. I am not defending this, but trying to explain the popularity of Mangione. |