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Political assassins often have incoherent politics and Tyler Robinson is no different. The young man who killed Charlie Kirk inscribed the shell casings of his bullets with obscure memes that say less about what he believed and more about where he spent time online. Robinson isn’t alone. Earlier this year the Annunciation Church shooter showed off a rifle inscribed with similar memes pulled from the internet. The Christchurch shooter in 2019 livestreamed their killing and left behind a meme laden manifesto.
So what the hell is going on? On this episode of Angry Planet, Michael Senters—a PhD candidate at Virginia Tech—has some unsatisfying answers. Senters painstakingly walks us through each message on Robinson’s bullets and explains the online spaces from whence they came.
If you don’t know a gropyer from a Helldiver or have never heard “OwO” said aloud, this episode is for you.
It will not make you feel better.
What the shell casings in the assassination of Charlie Kirk do – and don't – tell us
Yes, It’s the Guns. It’s Also the Phones.
Read the Charges Against Tyler Robinson
Exclusive: Leaked Messages from Charlie Kirk Assassin
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Published on 4 weeks, 2 days ago
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