Basically the title.
I'm seeing people praising this Luigi dude. However, I cannot think of a time in history when it became popular to advocate murdering people in the streets that wasn't followed by leftists committing mass atrocities.
All I have seen is an increase in advocacy for murdering white men, right wing ceos, our future president, and anyone seen as wealthy.
I am struggling to see how anyone is reconciling being right wing with the complete disorder and moral failing that murdering random people in the street would involve.
This isn't some issue that is bridging the gap with the left. They want you dead too. They will celebrate your death as well.
This is an example why I think we will never ultimately win because the right is so quick to adopt the ideas of the left.
So please give me an example in history where this hasn't led to bad examples.
To further illustrate my point. Look at the difference in media coverage. We know more about Luigi than the Nashville shooter or Crookes and one murdered a bunch of children and the other shot the president.
Yet we know Luigis social media, his goals and motivation, his childhood and every single picture meant to make him look cool.
Frankly, the reason you aren't seeing much condemnation of Luigi is because of who he killed.
If he killed a CEO of a power company, telecom company, restaurant chain, or basically any other business you wouldve likely seen a lot more condemnation and things would be more split.
But this guy was head of united Healthcare, which is infamous at this point for being an awful insurance company....potentially one of the worst. And its an industry that directly profits off of human misery. Not in the roundabout sense, but in the literal and direct sense as they have every incentive to deny coverage (that you paid for), and virtually no punishment for doing so.
You'd struggle to find people that are sympathetic of that business when frankly, that business is so damn corrupt that it really is one of the few things that all sides universally agree is evil, even if they disagree with how to replace it or fix it.
UHC led the industry by around double in first-round denials. 32%, last figures I saw. How many of that 32% never challenged the denial?