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167 points ceejayoz | 1 comments | | HN request time: 0.204s | source
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Devasta ◴[] No.43665747[source]
Tbh the only thing that surprises me about Luigi Mangione is that there hasn't been a thousand more like him over the years. What a farce the US healthcare industry is.
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1. kmeisthax ◴[] No.43666059[source]
The problem is that most school shooters are angry young men imitating the violent acts they saw on TV. To be clear, I don't mean they're watching violent fiction and reenacting it, I mean they're watching regular ol' news and getting inspiration. I mean, let's be clear here, the news is better at glorifying the acts of violent weirdos than actual writers are, mostly because fiction writers have an actual conscience. And there's a lot of people desperate for some kind of fame, which all these school shooters are getting.

Think about how you didn't really hear about movie theater shootings until someone shot up the one in Aurora. Now they're more common. There is a huge element of social contagion because shooters are very much copying each other's work.

Which would suggest that we would see a rise in CEO assassinations over time[0]. But the thing is, it's also legitimately harder to assassinate a CEO than shoot up a school. Schools are soft targets with predictable schedules for their occupancy. A CEO might be in 20 different countries over the course of a month; you'd have to engage in a LOT of cyberstalking to even have a chance of catching a CEO in your hometown. And not to mention, they usually have security detail specifically to prevent this exact thing from happening.

But who knows. There's a lot of people pissed off about corporate power, in every country, across party lines. It only takes one security fuck-up.

[0] This is what the phrase "propaganda of the deed" refers to