United Healthcare murder suspect Luigi Mangione has espoused a hodgepodge of unintelligent political views on social media, with posts ranging from calls to ban sex toys in Japan to modern-day America and Rome. Ranging from comparisons of collapse to condemnation of woke discrimination and DEI practices.
The tech-savvy 26-year-old seems to have opinions from all sides of the political spectrum, based on his Twitter activity, which includes links to philosophical books that discuss the ills of modern society; It included posts about the values of men in society. society.
Mangione, who graduated from the University of Pennsylvania with a degree in computer science in 2020, also seems obsessed with the impact of technology on young people, and is obsessed with categorizing and theorizing what he sees as a decline in human virtue. He seemed to be absorbed in it.
Disgust towards Japanese sex toys and the “modern Japanese urban environment”
In April, Mangione replied to your comment He talked about Japan's declining population rate and mused that the real problem is not immigration, but actually Japan's obsession with sex toys and pornography.
His proposed solutions include banning sex toys such as Tenga Fleshlights and replacing “conveyor belt sushi and vending machines” with “real human waiters” to “encourage natural relationships,” he said. This included “encouraging sex, physical fitness, and spirituality.”
Aldous Huxley, Ted Kasinsky, Jonathan Haidt, and his love for X speak to author Tim Urban
Mangione has expressed his love for many writers, bloggers, thinkers, and revolutionaries, including Aldous Huxley, Tim Urban, Jonathan Haidt, and Ted Krzysinski.
In April, he responded to a tweet about The Matrix with a quote from Huxley's book Brave New World.
“But I don't want comfort. I want God, I want poetry, I want real danger, I want freedom, I want goodness. I want sin,” Mangione wrote. .
Huxley's Brave New World, by its description, is a critique of capitalism, the bourgeoisie, and how class groups are indoctrinated in society.
Mr. Mangione also posted on his Goodreads account the name of eccentric dissident Ted Kaczynski, the infamous “Unabomber,” who terrorized the country for nearly two decades by mailing deadly bombs until his arrest in 1996. Sources said he posted a quote from him.
“Imagine a society that exposes people to situations that make them deeply unhappy and then gives them drugs to take away that unhappiness,” Kaczynski once wrote in a quote Mangione liked.
He also frequently reposts, likes, and replies to Tim Urban, a blogger known for his website Wait but Why, which frequently dives into the areas of artificial intelligence, space exploration, and human productivity. did.
Mangione have It quoted Hite and reposted a specific post by Urban that discussed the need to limit cell phone use for children under 16.
He also praised Urban's 2023 book, “What Are Our Problems?: A Self-Help Book for Society,” which he describes as a “political axis” book. It is said that he analyzes the human situation outside of the world.
urban I recently posted the word “umm” “That's not the point of the book,” Mangione said in an apparent reaction to the long history of X.
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Mangione also retweeted a statement from Haidt, a self-described centrist and author of the book “An Anxious Generation,” about why mental health is crumbling among children and young people.
Men are better suited for 'impossible situations and daring feats' and should consider taking up weightlifting
Mangione has posted and reposted several musings on the values and nature of men. “Men are built to endure impossible situations and daring feats,” a post on X said.
“If you want to understand more about men, look at all the movies they've made, the books they've written, the games they've invented when they were young. Almost all of them are about men being forced into positions or situations they don't know if they can overcome.” “It's about a young man who is challenged. Often he initially refuses to try because he believes he can't actually do it,” the post says.
“Unwillingly, he is forced out of the comfort of his home by a group of people with whom he is unlikely to become friends in the future, or by an imminent threat to his life or the life of the woman he loves…This is the mentality that society is trying hard to suppress. “And women can help protect it.”
He also answered politely. Gyms promoted themselves as a cheaper and better alternative to antidepressants and told fitness influencers about weightlifting tips.
Mangione However, Jordan Peterson criticized: The psychologist and author is often described as an influencer in the “manosphere” because his language is not concise enough.
He also posted about how the situation in modern America mimics the fall of Rome, which he said may have something to do with a decline in religiosity.
