• @Anticorp
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    1622 months ago

    The January 6th insurrection of 2020 was orchestrated and led by Donald Trump. Several nobodies have been charged and imprisoned over their miniscule contributions to the attack on our government. But the ringleader, the orchestrator, the figurehead behind it all faced no charges, no consequences, and was just reappointed to the highest office in the land. We don’t need Luigi to see that there is no justice inherent in the system. Justice is blind (to the misdeeds of the wealthy).

      • @Anticorp
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        92 months ago

        I’m sure they will. But there’s an enormous gulf between people who have millions of dollars, and people who represent multi-billion dollar corporations. The difference between a million and a billion dollars is basically about a billion dollars.

        • @finitebanjo
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          12 months ago

          TBF nobody Brian Thompson knew is at any disadvantage as a result of his death, Luigi isn’t being sued so it’s not Luigi vs a multibillion dollar corporation. It’s not like Luigi actually did anything to harm the corporations, they’re all still standing.

  • @Odd_so_Star_so_Odd
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    1002 months ago

    The law isn’t about morality or social good or promoting the general order; it’s about power and who wields it. The law is fundamentally a vehicle through which those who stand atop social hierarchies can command, exploit, and do violence to those less powerful. A CEO can kill tens of thousands of Americans every year with a pen and that isn’t murder: a coal company can poison generations and that isn’t murder: a police department can force homeless people to flee from place to place until they die from exposure and that isn’t murder. The law exists to protect and promote the interests of the powerful, because that is what legal systems are designed to do.

    • @[email protected]
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      2 months ago

      And that’s why we fight back where we can and weaponize what we can; that’s why we use jury nullification in cases like these.

      It wasn’t Luigi.

      • @FordBeeblebrox
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        82 months ago

        Can confirm, was playing couch split screen Madden with him all night. We drank a few beers and he crashed in the spare room

        …and believe you me your honor, I am a light sleeper and always wake up when the front door opens and closes in this apartment.

        • @[email protected]
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          2 months ago

          Ultimately, there is a better strategy to jury nullification:

          https://beyondcourts.org/sites/default/files/2022-07/Jury-Nullification-Toolkit-English_0.pdf

          TL;DR: It is most effective to plant seeds of doubt when reasonable, and legitimate ones. For this particular case, it would be the fact that the eyebrows don’t match between pictures, the police said they had found the backpack in NY only to then say they found him with his backpack at McDonalds, the fact that Luigi claims shit was planted on him and the police have a running history of planting evidence to suit their needs, etc.

          • @FordBeeblebrox
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            62 months ago

            You’re absolutely right, I was conflating the manhunt and trial.

            The faces don’t match, and keeping the gun would be my reasonable doubt. No reason to keep something you can print again anytime. The police’s history speaks for itself, no verdict

      • @WoodScientist
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        62 months ago

        You’re right. In fact, it wasn’t a human at all! It was St. Michael the Archangel himself, personally coming down from on high to smite the wicked and the greedy! It’s not Luigi’s fault that he just happens to look a bit like St. Michael!

  • @WhiteRabbit_33
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    642 months ago

    Source for anyone interested. I was initially confused since New York got rid of the death penalty decades ago, but it’s from a new federal charge I hadn’t seen yet.

    As far as I can find they haven’t officially said they’re pursuing the death penalty for this charge just that this charge is eligible for it. I see no other reason for it though.

    https://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2024/dec/19/luigi-mangione-eligible-death-penalty-new-federal-/

    • @Anticorp
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      422 months ago

      They’re going to do everything in their power to ensure he doesn’t get a jury of his peers.

    • dohpaz42
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      342 months ago

      Damn. They are genuinely scared shitless by this. They are not pulling any punches either. And there is nothing more dangerous than a group of powerful people who are scared.

      This is why the constitution has an amendment about cruel and unusual punishment. But we know that those in power have (decades-) long abandoned the constitution.

      I believe the genuine terrorism has been the US gov, and it’s been a long time in the making. They’ve spent generations conditioning us all that it’s somebody else’s dilemma. I hope their fervor to scare us back in line backfires extraordinarily.

    • @riodoro1
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      272 months ago

      Wait. The federal government still has death penalty?

      • @[email protected]
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        2 months ago

        Yeah, that’s why actually charging Trump for the insurrection would be so much of an issue. It would make him an enemy of the state, and anyone who aided him would be considered guilty of treason. The sentence for Treason is life or death. (Life in prison, or the death penalty)

        One could argue that giving money to someone is aid … thereby all of the GOP would be guilty of treason… And that would throw us into chaos

        • @Anticorp
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          322 months ago

          He is an enemy of the State, in the most literal sense of the phrase. He tried to overthrow the legitimate government FFS!

        • @riodoro1
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          202 months ago

          Holy shit, that’s serious. Thankfully he’s supposedly rich, so non of this applies to him. Instead he gets another 4 years of insurrection.

          • @[email protected]
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            172 months ago

            Well this time he didn’t need an insurrection, the American people just gave him the job back knowing what he did previously. The fact that no one even tries to say he is a decent person or a good person, and he’s who got picked, says a lot about our population.

    • madthumbs
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      -182 months ago

      Not to discredit the opinion, but don’t most school shooters (if not all -I don’t really pay attention) get killed on site and also have a personal grievance rather than just manipulation by media and statistics? Mangione seemed poised to become a serial killer. If he’s free’d, it tells society it’s ok to go around killing allegedly bad people (and ~20% of us are incredibly gullible conspiracy theorists -percent will be higher on certain sites on the internet as opposed to real life).

      We also have to wonder how much more effective long term Mangione could have been alive and free.

      • @enbyecho
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        212 months ago

        Mangione seemed poised to become a serial killer.

        That’s pure speculation. And I hate to tell you this but people don’t typically get sentence for “future crimes”.

        • @Jarix
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          22 months ago

          Not yet, give Trump a couple more months

      • @PunnyName
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        92 months ago

        He killed a serial killer. And killing multiple serial killers is a societal good (as long as the state isn’t the one doing the killing).

        • madthumbs
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          -252 months ago

          Denying people certain services does not equate to murder.

          Should I kill a CEO for approving VIOXX which caused heart disease, intense abdominal pain, and GERD? -How about the doctor for prescribing it over an extremely minor issue? -Then there’s the subsequent prescription ant-acids that can cause stomach cancer. -What about their responsibility when lemon water with cayenne worked as good or better?

          When I tore rotator cuffs, I was denied surgery from the insurance company because they were only up to 40% tears. -I recovered for the most part and am glad I didn’t get the risky surgery.

          I was told I needed a hernia operatation (umbilical). Other people got it and ended up needing follow up surgery. Every surgery is a risk of your life.

          So without knowing specifics (I have yet to see any among all this nonsense), I’m not supporting blatant killing which is what Mangione did. -Or show me how the CEO was directly responsible without resorting to propaganda (which statistics typically are).

          • @idiomaddict
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            92 months ago

            When it comes to denying claims, multiple reports suggest that UHC, which is the country’s largest health insurer and serves some 50 million people, is an industry leader, with a rate nearly double the industry average. A recent Senate report slammed the company for denying nursing care to patients recovering from falls and strokes on its Medicare Advantage plans, and it currently faces a class action lawsuit for its use of AI algorithms to automatically refuse payment.

            • madthumbs
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              -162 months ago

              Statistics are used for propaganda and lawsuits are not guilty verdicts. Without sitting in that courtroom, we shouldn’t be acting like jurors.

              • @idiomaddict
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                62 months ago

                Here’s the thing: I specifically selected a passage which had three different types of evidence (the whole article has more) because you wanted specifics but not statistics. So given that, was the senate report convincing?

                If not, please think about what sort of information you might want to support the concept that the CEO was culpable. Personally I would look for statistics in this type of situation and simply evaluate them myself to see if they are misleading, because statistics seem like the only way to separate one CEO from another.

                If there’s not a type of evidence that would work, you’re not holding a neutral position.

          • @enbyecho
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            12 months ago

            Denying people certain services does not equate to murder.

            I gotta say… having read your comment a couple of times: You are stunningly ignorant and self-centered.

          • FLeX
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            -152 months ago

            You are right but probably answering to a shit stirring bot or a 13yo edgelord.

            Making him a hero is fucked up and cringe, even if the other guy was worse.

      • @YarHarSuperstar
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        72 months ago

        No, they don’t. And I’m not sure why you think that he planned to continue killing, unless you know something we don’t.

        • madthumbs
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          2 months ago

          Was he an idiot? Why would he have been found with the murder weapon and a manifesto? If I were out to kill one person, both of those would be the first things I’d get rid of.

          Ok, maybe I can agree that he was an idiot.

          edit: yes! The fact that he was found with those can lead to different / harsher charges.

        • madthumbs
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          -142 months ago

          You don’t even know to source your propaganda. For all we know, it’s The Onion or The National Enquirer.

          -Maybe stay out of the debate on it?

            • madthumbs
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              -72 months ago

              A prankster? https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ken_Klippenstein

              In July 2019, Klippenstein was covered in the media after a Twitter incident in which he was retweeted by Iowa Congressman Steve King just before changing his Twitter display name to “Steve King is a white supremacist”.[45][46][47] In March 2021, Klippenstein pranked author Naomi Wolf by recommending she tweet an image of a fabricated anti-vaxxer quotation paired with a picture of American pornography actor Johnny Sins.[48]

              On Memorial Day 2021, Klippenstein tricked political commentators Dinesh D’Souza and Matt Schlapp, as well as Florida Congressman Matt Gaetz, into retweeting a photograph of John F. Kennedy’s assassin Lee Harvey Oswald, whom Klippenstein claimed was his veteran grandfather.[49] After being retweeted by Gaetz, Klippenstein changed his display name on Twitter to be “matt gaetz is a pedo”. Gaetz later deleted his retweet.[50][51]

  • Wren
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    452 months ago

    deleted by creator

    • @[email protected]
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      212 months ago

      Yeah, threaten millennials and gen z with death… That’ll go the way you think it will.

    • @Lumisal
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      172 months ago

      I think the wrong message will be sent.

      The message will be “if you’re going to off a CEO, you might as well include the whole board and any other CEO you can because the punishment is the same.”

      • Queen HawlSera
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        62 months ago

        “The punishment for one murder is the same as the punishment for several murders is the same as the punishment for looking at the governor funny; It’s just death.” - Civvie11

  • @foggianism
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    362 months ago

    It’s because the elite got afraid and they need to set an example now so that the masses don’t get stupit ideas.

  • @Maggoty
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    352 months ago

    I’m still trying to figure out where the federal jurisdiction is in a simple murder, it’s not a serial thing, a hate crime, or a crime conducted across state lines. Could the federal government really just be charging anyone with simple murder?

      • @[email protected]
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        102 months ago

        Unironically it is due to him using a phone across state lines in order to stalk the CEO first as well as the bus.

        • @Maggoty
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          382 months ago

          That is the flimsiest crap I’ve ever heard. There’s been a problem with stalkers not getting prosecuted for decades and now suddenly they’re so interested they get charges in a matter of days?

          The double standard could not be more clear. The people are left to fend for themselves while the federal government uses every tiny scrap of power to defend the wealthy.

    • @Syrc
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      2 months ago

      I think they’re trying to charge him for Terrorism.

      • @Maggoty
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        22 months ago

        The state is charging terrorism. The Feds are charging stalking and murder.

  • @pufferfisherpowder
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    272 months ago

    (Verse 1) When the kids hit the floor, but they ask us for more, That’s Amer’ca. When the lives of the poor are ignored by the law, That’s Amer’ca.

    (Chorus) Watch them plead, watch them die, while the courts close an eye, That’s Amer’ca. If the rich man falls, then the gallows will call, That’s Amer’ca.

    (Verse 2) You can slaughter a class, and they’ll let it all pass, That’s Amer’ca. But for one CEO, they’ll demand death row, That’s Amer’ca.

    (Chorus) Where the guilty walk free, and the children just bleed, That’s Amer’ca. If your crime’s against power, you’re gone in an hour, That’s Amer’ca.

    (Bridge) It’s a system of lies where the powerless die, And their screams hit the sky, unanswered, denied, That’s Amer’ca.

    (Outro) So remember the game, it’s a broken refrain, That’s Amer’ca. When a life’s worth is weighed by the dollars displayed, That’s Amer’ca.

    • @[email protected]
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      142 months ago

      I hope you intended this to be to the tune of “that’s amore” because that’s what happened in my head

      • @pufferfisherpowder
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        42 months ago

        That’s what came to my mind for some reason, reading the post.

  • @BassTurd
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    252 months ago

    I wonder if the next shooter, if they survive the attack, will also be paraded around the same way. Hopefully we find out sooner than later.

    • @finitebanjo
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      22 months ago

      Some guy in Michigan stabbed his boss to death recently and the answer is no. People actually don’t seem to care at all, even.

      • @[email protected]
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        52 months ago

        The reporting that the guy stabbing is a copycat crime is 100% promoted from the media. He’s some random dude that stabbed his boss. I believe that some are trying to group him into the same category as the UHC shooter, random stuff like this probably happens every day.

        • @finitebanjo
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          12 months ago

          I’ve seen people in these very comments claim him as part of their “movement.” I guess we won’t know for sure unless they get interviews or something.

      • @[email protected]
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        42 months ago

        I’m not sure how politically motivated that was. The story I read was he was in a higher level position, in a morning meeting. Quickly left the meeting, showed back up 5 minutes later with a “surgical mask” and stabbed the boss before running off. The boss survived, the guy was probably a run of the mill psycho and probably didn’t put the same amount of thought into it as Luigi did.

  • @Arbiter
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    222 months ago

    They hanged John Brown too.

  • @Sanctus
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    182 months ago

    There is a sickness in blind faith to hierarchy.

    There is fallacy in the belief that things rightfully live above others.

    There is madness in the mind who puts such weight of importance on a single individual whom, before his death, most did not know his name.

    He was man, not a god, and he had to be shown that.

  • @Philharmonic3
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    152 months ago

    Crank it up to dozens of CEOs. Apparently if it’s normal, it’s not a problem

  • @[email protected]
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    122 months ago

    The main purpose of law enforcement is to protect property, but their second job is to protect the wealthy. So if someone manages to harm the wealthy, they take that personally.

    • @[email protected]
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      82 months ago

      That certainly explains the difference in how they handle female and male rape victims. Female rape victims are a property crime and male rape victims are beta cucks. This is how they see it.

    • @FordBeeblebrox
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      32 months ago

      The age/race/economic level/crimes/charges/verdicts graph is one that is…intriguing in a scientific sense and likely necessary to show in crayon picture form to the next administration, but god DAMN do I not want to be the statistician that researches all that.

    • That Annoying Vegan
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      22 months ago

      Dylann roof, though not a school shooter exactly, was charged federally and is gonna be executed

      • @finitebanjo
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        32 months ago

        Right, I was asking for a school shooter whose prosecutors did NOT try for death sentence. That’s the weird implication made by the post’s image.