The dirtbag left and the populist right were, for once, in agreementโthey didnโt want Luigi Mangione caught.ย
Despite a nationwide manhunt, breathlessly promoted by millionaire gabbers in the legacy media, the people of Americaโthe ones who vote, the ones who pay the taxes for the wars, the ones whose family members have been bankrupted by healthcare companies utilizing AI chatbots to find fault with their life-saving health claimsโwere fed up.ย
The dirtbag left, as voiced by the former Washington Post reporter Taylor Lorenz, was nothing short of disappointed as news broke that Mangione had been captured on Monday in Pennsylvania. Lorenz admitted to Piers Morgan on that eveningโs show that she felt โjoyโ upon learning of the assassination. Morgan, as he is wont to do, was outraged. Joy? How could anyone feel โjoyโ about the death of another human being?ย
The Daily Wire chief Ben Shapiro was similarly incensed. Though he spent the better part of Monday defending and praising Daniel Penny, a former marine who subdued a homeless black man for five minutes on an NYC subway ultimately leading to his death, Shapiro held no such sympathies for Mangione, who had instead targeted the wealthy, white CEO of a company that is known for denying the life-saving claims of its clients.ย
To Shapiro, the 26-year-old Ivy Leaguer who brazenly assassinated UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson in mid-Manhattan last week was not an antihero lashing out at a corrupted health system, he was some punk kid animating blood-soaked terrors of the new left. There was simply no rhyme or reason to Mangioneโs action other than that he was just another America-hating leftist who wanted a successful member of the capitalist power class destroyed.
For Shapiro, and for many other well-heeled pundits across the centrist media axis, this was an open and shut case of far-left boogeyman extremists flaunting their anti-life positions for America to see. In Shapiroโs own words: โThe revolutionary left is creeping into the mainstream. Liberals are people who disagree with me on public policy but arenโt in favor of, you know, the murder of their opponents. The left is a different thing.โ In Shapiro and Morganโs minds, the celebration of Thompsonโs death (and it was celebrated) could be simply chalked up to leftwing lunatics like Lorenz and the BlueSky resisters who are hellbent on the destruction of all that is morally right and sound in our country.ย
But thereโs a major problem with this hypothesis: Itโs not true. As evidenced by the comment section below Shapiroโs own YouTube video on the topic, even his own, die-hard conservative fans had heard enough from the California lawyer.ย
The top comment on his video titled โThe EVIL Revolutionary Left Cheers Murder!โ read simply: โWe got conservatives and liberals hugging each other in the comments section.โ Another: โIโm not buying this โleft vs rightโ shit anymore Ben, I want healthcare for my family.โ And yet another: โRight winger here, you are wrong Ben, this man denied 35% of claims. The facts do not care about any of our feelings. Respectfully, I think this take was out of touch.โ
And the anger didnโt dissipate there. โIโm a Republican. I voted for Trump and Iโm unsubscribing from Ben,โ read another highly-rated response. Comment after comment disagreed with Shapiro and other right-wing partisans attempting to explain away the real meaning of Luigi, the boy who killed. โSaw my lifelong hardworking father become bankrupt as a result of claims being denied after getting cancer,โ wrote one commentator who got more likes than Shapiroโs own video on the subject. โYou are out of touch, man.โ
And it wasnโt just Shapiro and Morgan who attempted to paint the deplorable public who met the murder with a shrug as heartless, soulless, cowardly vigilantes. CNN and Fox News were vexed by the killing, with both networks struggling to frame the killing in a context that best benefited their advertisers. Though it was difficult for their anchors to grasp the horror, Mangioneโs message was being received loud and clear by their viewers. And many, to the shock and awe of the punditry class, liked it.
โNone of these news programs are talking about the incredible lack of empathy from the general public about this because of how these insurance companies treat people when theyโre at their most vulnerable,โ the comedian Bill Burr said in response to the assassination. โAfter weโve all given them our money every fโking month and now we finally need you and all you do is deny usโฆ. I gotta be honest with you, I love that fโking CEOs are fโking afraid right now. You should be. By and large, youโre all a bunch of selfish, greedy fโking pieces of sh-t and a lot of you are mass murderers, you just donโt pull the trigger so it looks clean.โ
In Mangione, large parts of the American public identified clear markers from their own lives. He reminded them of Travis Bickle, of Alain Delon. Mangioneโs smile, seen only in a grainy picture caught on a CCTV camera at the hostel where he stayed in NYC, provoked swoons across the net. Not only had this man attacked an institution many of them despised, he was good looking too.ย
โIf the guy is fit, you must acquit,โ read one viral post on ๐. โHeโs even hotter with his mask and shirt off,โ wrote another. Mangioneโs looks were so celebrated that the New York Times instructed its newsroom to โdial backโ the use of Mangioneโs photo on its stories. Fox News went the other direction, dedicating hours upon hours of air time Mangioneโs face as its hosts took turns complaining about Americans who were attracted to the alleged killer.ย
The host Jesse Watters dedicated an entire portion of his nightly show Tuesday to a segment his producers titled โLibs Have the Hots for Alleged Killer.โ Watters said that women were attracted to โthe bad boy factorโ Mangione possessed, that they dreamed of being Bonnie to his Clyde. Watters finished by claiming that some women have just a โsick fantasyโ for โdamaged guys.โย
The women of Fox News didnโt fare much better as they attempted to placate the whims of their advertisers. Dana Perino was โdisgustedโ that โsome people say this is because of the insurance industry.โ Obscured from her take was the killerโs own words, which Fox News and CNN have both refused to release as of this writing. In the manifesto, confirmed by the Daily Beast, Mangione makes it clear that his actions were indeed โbecause of the insurance industry.โ
โThe US has the #1 most expensive healthcare system in the world, yet we rank roughly #42 in life expectancy,โ Mangione wrote. โUnited is the largest company in the US by market cap, behind only Apple, Google, Walmart. It has grown and grown, but has our life expectancy? No [sic] the reality is, these [indecipherable] have simply gotten too powerful, and they continue to abuse our country for immense profit because the American public has allowed them to get away with it.โ
Though weโve come to expect CNN to suppress manifestos such as these, itโs rich for Fox News, whose anchors bemoaned the suppression of the Nashville transgender killerโs manifesto, to do the same when the words attack their cash cows. And the hosts at Fox News werenโt done. In most Orwellian fashion, Emily Compagno called on employers to โcheck the social mediaโ of employees to see if they cheered on Mangione, to hell with personal privacy and the First and Fourth Amendments.
Wanted posters with the names and faces of healthcare company CEOs were plastered onto street lamps in Manhattan Tuesday. Thompsonโs face was included with a big, fat X mark over it. On the internet, Mangione was being made a star. In one viral video glorifying Mangione, clippers edited Charlie XCXโs โSpring Breakersโ over videos of Mangione being arrested and his valedictorian speech at Baltimoreโs prestigious all-boys Gilman school. A folk singer went viral on TikTok with a Dylan-esque jig called โThere ainโt no U in United Health.โ T-shirts with his likeness surrounded by hearts were being printed by the thousands. Even a poll created by the hard-right ๐ account โEnd Wokenessโ found surprising support for Mangione with nearly 15,000 users voting that the assassination was โjustified.โ
And the internet was not the only place where Mangione found uncomfortable favor. In the streets of Italy, walls were graffitied with โDeny, Defend, Deposeโ and โLuigi Mangione Our Hero.โ An ๐ account that shared the image received more than 15,000 likes. On Highway 99 in Seattle, a roadway sign was hacked to read: โOne less CEO. Many more to go.โ In Santa Fe, New Mexico, someone posted fliers around town that read โDeny, Defend, Depose.โ
Those who knew Mangione couldnโt believe it was him. TMZ shared video of Mangione in college, smashing a beer against his head before chugging it. Classmates referred to him as โthe life of the party.โ A former roommate described the killing as โincompatibleโ with Mangioneโs personality. A friend of Luigiโs said the news was โunfathomable.โย
Then came the donations. Mangioneโs lawyer, Thomas Dickey, said they were pouring in from all parts of this country. The CNN host Kaitlan Collins couldnโt believe what she was hearing. And although Dickey said he was unlikely to accept the donations, Collins and the group panels that followed struggled to comprehend just how many Americans saw this kid as the American Antihero.ย
But Bill Burr could see it. And so too could millions of Americans, many of whom ran to social media to cheer on the assassin. โFor (CNN) to be like, โWhy would anyone do this!?!โ Theyโre denying claims and people are dying. The food supply is poisoned. The motive out there is wild,โ Burr concluded.ย
Then came Luigiโs tweets. Although ๐ owner Elon Musk initially scrubbed Mangioneโs alleged ๐ account, the page was reinstated just hours later and was recently granted a verification badge. For the past few days, Luigiโs past tweets have been going viral across the platform. He voiced concerns about declining birth rates in Japan, examined the consequences of the decline of Christianity, complained about DEI, shared Peter Thiel speeches, decried wokeism, supported nuclear energy, and poked fun at the atheist Richard Dawkins. From his tweets, he seemed to be a New Rightโleaning, libertarian tech bro who followed an exotic mix of accounts ranging from Robert F. Kennedy Jr. and AOC to Joe Rogan and Ezra Klein.
The right dug that he spoke their language, and the left saw a handsome mercenary who had done their dirty work. As Shapiro, Watters, Morgan, Collins, Perino, Compagno, and others chewed through their typical material on the TV, the internet was abuzz, marveling at Mangioneโs eclectic tweets and manifesto.
First came the revelations about his reading habits. Ted Kaczynski, Dr. Seuss, Aldous Huxley, Orwell, and Malcom Gladwell were just some of the authors Mangione reviewed on his GoodReads account. Mangionie had shared a quote from Seussโs The Lorax: โUnless someone like you cares a whole awful lot, / Nothing is going to get better. Itโs not.โ The books on back pain and psychedelic therapy were there too. A lot of it was source material the online right had already read and digested. Depending on where you fell, ideologically, the motive was in there somewhere.ย
For some, it was clear that Mangione went off the grid when he became interested in the use of psychedelics to treat his unyielding back pain. A viral 2023 tweet about granola crunching, yoga millennial moms getting their minds scrambled on ayahuasca retreats in the jungle was retweeted by Musk and many agreed that the same had happened to Mangione.ย
โI do apologize for any strife or traumas but it had to be done,โ Mangione wrote in his manifesto. โFrankly, these parasites simply had it comingโฆ Obviously the problem is more complex, but I do not have space, and frankly I do not pretend to be the most qualified person to lay out the full argument. But many have illuminated the corruption and greed (e.g.: Rosenthal, Moore), decades ago and the problems simply remain. It is not an issue of awareness at this point, but clearly power games at play. Evidently I am the first to face it with such brutal honesty.โ
Mangione doesnโt seem like some punk leftist driven mad by hallucinogenic-induced terrors. His thoughts are not elliptical; they are concise and charged. The scion of one of the richest legacies in all of Maryland and a child of a family who were made wealthy via their (ironically) knee-deep interests in the healthcare industry, Mangione had achieved in everything he attempted before chronic back pain changed his life forever.ย
After graduating from the University of Pennsylvania, Mangione took off for Hawaii where he earned a spot at a โco-livingโ space in Hawaii managed by RJ Martin. Mangioneโs back pain was so intense that he told Martin it was impossible to have sex or date anyone as a result.ย
Martin described Mangione as โan ideal memberโ of the co-living space. โOur mission statement is that weโre a community of givers and that we leave things better than we found them,โ Martin said. โWe look for people who are looking to give back. And he fit the bill.โ Mangione opted for spinal surgery to treat spondylolisthesis in 2023. And based on an x-ray image of Mangioneโs back that appears on his Twitter banner, the alleged killer likely received a lumbar fusion, a metal brace inserted into his lower spinal vertebrae.ย
If Magioneโs manifesto is taken at face value, even the richest amongst us struggle at the hands of a system that prioritizes capital over people. Despite voicing fair critiques of the American health system, it goes without saying that Mangione is no hero. His brutal murder of Thompson, a middle-classer who rose to the very top of the American corporate totem pole, speaks to the precarious and violent nature of America, 1492 to now. He is not the first, nor the last, to selfishly snuff out the life of another vain pursuit of his own particular revenge.ย
But Mangione, who escaped into the American interior before being busted at a McDonaldโs in Altoona, is the exact sort of antihero the internet has always craved and cheered on. From Breaking Bad and Joker to V for Vendetta and the Sopranos, Americaโs fictional tastes reflect a people who revel in cheering on complicated bad guys. Itโs an uncomfortable truth we are all struggling, in our own ways, to process this week.
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In a post to ๐ on Wednesday, Elon Musk responded to Mangioneโs manifesto. Musk wrote โnothing would do more to improve the health, lifespan and quality of life for Americans than making GLP inhibitors super low cost to the public,โ a statement out of step with the incoming HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedyโs natural vision of a healthy America. Muskโs statement hid a troubling truth. One bullet and a page of scribbled words had spurred President-elect Donald Trumpโs new favorite friend to address the crumbling American healthcare system on his worldwide platform.ย
On the other side of the political ocean, Sen. Elizabeth Warren weighed in on the situation Wednesday evening stating, โPeople can only be pushed so far.โ Some called for Warren to be thrown off her committee assignments. Others cheered her. Warren wasnโt done. She called the killing โa warning that if you push people hard enough, they lose faith in the ability of their government to make change.โ Rep. Alexandria-Ocasia Cortez took a similar line, claiming that โanyone who is confused or shocked or appalled, they need to understand that people interpret and feel and experience denied claims as an act of violence.โ
The fact that Mangioneโs actions are being discussed at such lengths across the political spectrum indicates much more than naked vigilantism. It suggests a certain rage bubbling underneath the staid surface of modern America toward institutions beyond the peopleโs control. Itโs an anger that animates itself in all sorts of ways, both political and cultural regardless of political affiliation. After all, this is the country we builtโa violent one. And itโs been a violent year.ย