
When school shootings started to happen, a lot of people pointed out the big thing the media names were doing that worsened it: mentioning the killers’ names. It made school shootings a source of talk, which is exactly what the shooters wanted.
So, when Luigi Mangione killed the CEO of United Healthcare, they made the same mistake. Luigi became the face of John Everyman, standing up to the corporations that have butchered America like a cow being served up for dinner.
Luigi hats are still worn as symbols of anti-corporatism.
Luigi’s guards had to tell women to stop sending him nudes.
Luigi became the big face of what it means to stand up to the big man.
And then…nothing.
Or was it?
I don’t know how many of you guys heard, but there have been a string of very “interesting” CEO deaths lately.
Blackstone, one of the key reasons why America’s rental market is as bad as it is, had its CEO get killed in an office shooting. Much like United Healthcare, Blackstone is seen as an evil corporation because it’s ruining the lives of average Americans.
The shooting happened in a major corporate Wall Street building, by a 27-year-old who had no real past record of violence. It’s almost as if he snapped or something, right?
Then, earlier in June, Nicholas Manning, CEO of HCA Healthcare's West Valley Medical Centre was found dead in a Baltimore hotel of a suspected overdose. His family is claiming they believe it’s murder.
Most recently, the CEO of Siemens was killed in a “freak helicopter crash” along with his family. They were visiting New York City, and the helicopter just fell apart. While this is speculation, I wouldn’t be surprised if the helicopter was doctored before it took flight, all things considered.
Another CEO was killed in a freak accident while skydiving, but I’m not going to count that one. I’m just going to point out, CEOs are starting to shake in their boots, to the point that they’re all beefing up security.
For the past several years, reports have come out about billionaires building bunkers.
It’s almost as if they’ve started to realize that ushering in the complete destruction of the middle class was a bad idea because people are turning against them. A lot of people can’t even fathom what it means to be a billionaire—how much money and power those people have compared to the average person.
Now that the meagre basics of life, such as a house and healthcare, are starting to fall out of grips, they’re starting to get angry at anyone who can enjoy an upscale style of life. And you know what? They’re right to feel that way.
The wealthy are scared. They should be, because people are getting fed up with the dystopia they’re serving.
What I find interesting is how the media is oddly silent about the new CEO murders, compared to school shootings.
Around five corporations own 90 percent of all media. This is not a falsehood. This is a plain ol’ fact. Those corporations are owned by the very billionaires that put this system into practice, turned us against one another, and shoved a kakistocracy into power.
And the thing is, they sure are showing a lot of smarts when it comes to the CEO deaths—especially when compared to the way they handle things like mass shootings, school shootings, or family annihilations.
When it’s a matter of the commoners, those same tabloids are always blowing up names, making everything sensational, and almost turning the victims into a freak show of sorts. Of course, this makes killers more likely to try their own approach later on.
When it’s a CEO’s death, a single press leak trickles out, and then all of a sudden, the media is mum on it. All of a sudden, they don’t call CEOs by their real name. It’s “an employee of the company” or “a hardworking father of six.”
This was, of course, after a bunch of newspapers scolded readers for cheering on Luigi. They didn’t get the reactions they had hoped when talking about the CEO’s execution and it backfired horribly.
It’s almost as if the media knows that talking about these things encourages copycat killers. And maybe they don’t really care if it’s the average American’s children who die. After all, there are a whole lot more of us than there are of them.
Whether the media wants to recognize it or not, the class war has started a new phase.
For the first time in recent history, we’re starting to see the underclass rise up against the rich. We’re starting to see people get angry to the point that they feel they have nothing left to lose aside from their shitty lives.
This is a big deal, people.
It’s also 100 percent predictable because it happened so often before.
This is the start of a cycle that has always happened after the poor get too poor—and it’s now happening here, because the rich forgot that they can’t live without the poor. They also seem to forget that the poor are far more common than the rich.
Historically, this happens fairly often and the results are always predictable. Every single country that had this type of revolution had a major breakup with capitalism, one that took centuries to correct.
Some, such as France, China, and Belgium, have been able to recover from their revolutions. Others, such as Russia, haven’t. Where America will end up depends solely on the behavior of its upper class, and how much they’re willing to work with the common man.

