There are two kinds of "fascination" at play here - those who believe he is a hero and someone to be emulated (as seen on Reddit and the like) and those who are fascinated by the fascination (mostly legacy media and whoever is still on FaceBook).
Of course, the average person might remember the shooting (stressing might at this point) and almost none would know Luigi Mangione by name. Which is to say, almost any "fascination" today is just a reflection of a highly distilled internet alcove, a self-identified cohort which over time builds it's own culture and assumes that everyone around them is to some degree as "informed" as the are about their "fascination".
It does not take an obscure novel to explain the "fascination" the powerless have with the dream of somehow gaining power over the powerful - but as the movie Parasite so perfectly illustrated - that moment is likely to be fleeting, self-destructive, and ultimately meaningless as the world will quickly lose it's "fascination".
Once ordinary people start actually organizing and using violence, they tend get better conditions with society becoming reorganized for their benefit.
A good example is the Swedish peasants. The Swedish historian Dick Harrison wrote a book of which he states
>Huvudtemat är den politiska och socialhistoriska läroprocess genom vilken de svenska bönderna insåg att politiskt våld lönar sig, att en militarisering av det politiska beteendet resulterar i ökat samhälleligt inflytande.
i.e.
>The main theme is the political and socio-historical learning process through which the Swedish farmers learned that political violence pays off, that a militarization of the political behaviour results in increased societal influence.
Once it gets going and you learn how to do it leads to persistent and possibly permanent domination of society. In Sweden the farmer class owned at least 50% of the land. The Denmark, the nobility and church owned 90%. This kind of things saves whole peoples.
This influence also multiplies. When you own your own land and aren't dependent on others and make your own decisions, you become more capable. Look at the lowest classes in the UK, how they are unable to do anything. In Sweden, those don't exist, because people have always had a reasonable amount of independence, and this is because they had power, so when you start wielding it you get more and you get better and more capable, because you have to.
The peasant rebellions you reference were grassroots resistance against heavy taxation and attempted tax increases — they were violent reactions to the violation of private property rights by an undemocratic state. Comparing those circumstances to modern societies with free speech and full democratic rights is completely off the mark.
The brutal violence against an innocent person marked as a "class enemy", and the groundswell of support for it, is much more reminiscent of the communist violence that led to the Russian Revolution of 1917, and the decades of mass murder and totalitarian oppression that followed.
This can be seen by looking at very different Danish situation, which also existed, and which resulted from a situation which at one point probably did not differ substantially from that is Sweden.
I think the goal must always be that as many people as possible have as much power as possible, so that they are forced to exercise it and thereby get used to making decisions. If one ends up in the Danish situation, then it's reasonable to use violence to get at least to the Swedish situation, otherwise your descendants may end up as the British lower classes, which an unacceptable state.
Think like in the game Go. You calculate the score at the end and ask yourself what you want to become of your eventual descendants.
If the goal is to distribute power, then the last thing you want to do is encourage the creation of an unaccountable and violent elite that does not need to operate through public discourse available to everyone through their freedom of speech.
Yes and we've seen what comes of that. 'You wretches detestable on land and sea...', that's what you get when you have an unaccountable and violent elite.
But a violent people setting things up as they like is what I prefer. You can stabilize it, with Swiss style direct democracy, but the public's capacity for well-organized violence is a good foundation which can restore the democratic, egalitarian system if it breaks down.
This murder is not the kind of use of violence that can actually lead to political environments conducive to constructive change. Constructive use of violence would be like the founding fathers of the U.S. who clearly laid out to the crown why they were rebelling, and then rebelled.
They gave fair disclosure and made war honorably, or as honorably as war can be waged. Going out and murdering some innocent person, and then celebrating that, and justifying it by vilifying the victim as a class enemy, as many in the far left are doing, is just creating an environment prone to mass-dehumanization and tyranny.
I don't think honorable conduct has much to do with success.
Many approaches work. Ireland, Israel, India, etc. all succeeded. I think one can do things in a very dirty way, and sometimes in a very clean way. It depends on the opponents and what they're doing, and the attitudes of the other relevant entities.
US manuals usually discuss this kind of thing as an early stage of destabilization, before things go to open warfare, and I think that's correct. I wouldn't say that it for sure is an effective way to creating something suitable for the kind of disorder where a revolution is possible, but I don't think that was Mangione's goal either.
I think this was personal-- that felt he that the company had wronged him or a group of which he was part in a way that he could not get righted by the courts, so that he had to obtain revenge on his own, but maybe I'm imagining him as having my own moral view of courts and the legal system-- basically, if they will not hear a matter where someone is exploiting me, they make themselves irrelevant and I can do what I like (i.e. imagine that you get shot, and the courts will prosecute people who shoot people, so you go them-- no need for personal vengeance, but if it was done by a diplomat, you beat him to death right there, because the courts wouldn't hear you-- i.e. by being willing to hear cases, take into account any kind of thing which affects you, the courts substitute for private vengeance, and I see this is their basic function, on which they've then built).
There is less than zero commonality between the situation today and those Swedish peasants. "Ordinary people" in the US are nowhere near desperate enough to sacrifice themselves in a rebellion - and who exactly would they even rebel against, much less how would they rebel? Pile into a bunch of minivans and storm the local State Farm branch office? Maybe try to capture the local police precinct a-la John Rambo?
People are becoming more aware of the Shadow State that is the financial/mercantilist class. The people that the government outsources everything it can't do on paper to. I would not be surprised to see other forms of insurer come under increased scrutiny in the years to come.
It's not that much of a stretch to say that the US is a planned economy, given a sufficient understanding of how those systems operate writ large. Unelected bureaucrats would be a step up, elected officials two, from what we have, which is an unelected, private, distributed "death panel" for any economic decision the average person might want to make. Want to go to school, or start a business, or have housing, or buy enough food for the week? You're not beholden to your family, or your neighbors, or your community, but to some banker or credit bureau executive, and whoever they've delegated their powers to.
As illustrated by Luigi and the response to his actions, "ordinary people" in the US know exactly who to rebel against.
It should be noted that his assassination attempt followed a year where no less than 3 people set themselves on fire in protest of another arm of America's industrial grinder. Which is to say that the most recent act doesn't represent a sudden escalation, but is instead emblematic of a progression from despair to anger. Several billionaires also predicted this progression, warning their peers to ease up on their behavior. They're not listening, and some "ordinary people" seem ready to make them.
I don't think the Swedish peasantry was very desperate. They were well-organized and quite wealthy. I'd put them as upper middle class.
The equivalent of their level of military organization would probably not be minivans, it would be something like rolling out barbed wire, laying smoke, digging trenches with machines, mortar teams, snipers and ordinary riflemen. Something which in practice would be impossible to deal with and which would immediately necessitate negotiations.
I'm not propagating for that though, but I do think there is a similarity to the learning process-- how the Swedish peasantry chose to develop this capacity and strengthened it until it was useful.
Think of humans as these epsilon-greedy things, which with probability epsilon go and explore the payoff space. I think people see that things are being done to them that cross the line of screwing them over to something like crushing them, and this makes attempting to get back at those doing the crushing to get them to back off rational. Thus I think that it's reasonable to expect an exploration of violence to see where good payoffs can be had and where you can deterrence.
If they were going to frame someone they wouldn't pick a guy hot enough to have 1/4 of the Internet lusting after him. Luigi is incredibly popular with GenZ and young millennials.
Their liking him does not seem to have prevented seemingly near-100% belief in the police version of events. They are orthogonal.
It’s like everyone forgot that we don’t actually have any way to ID the shooter (because the video never got his face), and very little physical evidence was left at the scene. The police say this Luigi guy was carrying around the murder weapon and a manifesto (that very conveniently also establishes motive), and everyone just buys it totally uncritically (and also comments on how much they like him).
I think the NYPD is simply unable to publicly admit that for their $16M per day budget they can’t ID or find a guy who shot someone on video in the middle of a public street.
People might start asking what we are getting for that money if they can’t solve simple crimes, and if perhaps the budget should be scaled back if it’s going to be so ineffective.
22 comments
[ 1.4 ms ] story [ 65.2 ms ] threadOf course, the average person might remember the shooting (stressing might at this point) and almost none would know Luigi Mangione by name. Which is to say, almost any "fascination" today is just a reflection of a highly distilled internet alcove, a self-identified cohort which over time builds it's own culture and assumes that everyone around them is to some degree as "informed" as the are about their "fascination".
It does not take an obscure novel to explain the "fascination" the powerless have with the dream of somehow gaining power over the powerful - but as the movie Parasite so perfectly illustrated - that moment is likely to be fleeting, self-destructive, and ultimately meaningless as the world will quickly lose it's "fascination".
Once ordinary people start actually organizing and using violence, they tend get better conditions with society becoming reorganized for their benefit.
A good example is the Swedish peasants. The Swedish historian Dick Harrison wrote a book of which he states
>Huvudtemat är den politiska och socialhistoriska läroprocess genom vilken de svenska bönderna insåg att politiskt våld lönar sig, att en militarisering av det politiska beteendet resulterar i ökat samhälleligt inflytande.
i.e.
>The main theme is the political and socio-historical learning process through which the Swedish farmers learned that political violence pays off, that a militarization of the political behaviour results in increased societal influence.
Once it gets going and you learn how to do it leads to persistent and possibly permanent domination of society. In Sweden the farmer class owned at least 50% of the land. The Denmark, the nobility and church owned 90%. This kind of things saves whole peoples.
This influence also multiplies. When you own your own land and aren't dependent on others and make your own decisions, you become more capable. Look at the lowest classes in the UK, how they are unable to do anything. In Sweden, those don't exist, because people have always had a reasonable amount of independence, and this is because they had power, so when you start wielding it you get more and you get better and more capable, because you have to.
The brutal violence against an innocent person marked as a "class enemy", and the groundswell of support for it, is much more reminiscent of the communist violence that led to the Russian Revolution of 1917, and the decades of mass murder and totalitarian oppression that followed.
This can be seen by looking at very different Danish situation, which also existed, and which resulted from a situation which at one point probably did not differ substantially from that is Sweden.
I think the goal must always be that as many people as possible have as much power as possible, so that they are forced to exercise it and thereby get used to making decisions. If one ends up in the Danish situation, then it's reasonable to use violence to get at least to the Swedish situation, otherwise your descendants may end up as the British lower classes, which an unacceptable state.
Think like in the game Go. You calculate the score at the end and ask yourself what you want to become of your eventual descendants.
But a violent people setting things up as they like is what I prefer. You can stabilize it, with Swiss style direct democracy, but the public's capacity for well-organized violence is a good foundation which can restore the democratic, egalitarian system if it breaks down.
They gave fair disclosure and made war honorably, or as honorably as war can be waged. Going out and murdering some innocent person, and then celebrating that, and justifying it by vilifying the victim as a class enemy, as many in the far left are doing, is just creating an environment prone to mass-dehumanization and tyranny.
Many approaches work. Ireland, Israel, India, etc. all succeeded. I think one can do things in a very dirty way, and sometimes in a very clean way. It depends on the opponents and what they're doing, and the attitudes of the other relevant entities.
US manuals usually discuss this kind of thing as an early stage of destabilization, before things go to open warfare, and I think that's correct. I wouldn't say that it for sure is an effective way to creating something suitable for the kind of disorder where a revolution is possible, but I don't think that was Mangione's goal either.
I think this was personal-- that felt he that the company had wronged him or a group of which he was part in a way that he could not get righted by the courts, so that he had to obtain revenge on his own, but maybe I'm imagining him as having my own moral view of courts and the legal system-- basically, if they will not hear a matter where someone is exploiting me, they make themselves irrelevant and I can do what I like (i.e. imagine that you get shot, and the courts will prosecute people who shoot people, so you go them-- no need for personal vengeance, but if it was done by a diplomat, you beat him to death right there, because the courts wouldn't hear you-- i.e. by being willing to hear cases, take into account any kind of thing which affects you, the courts substitute for private vengeance, and I see this is their basic function, on which they've then built).
It should be noted that his assassination attempt followed a year where no less than 3 people set themselves on fire in protest of another arm of America's industrial grinder. Which is to say that the most recent act doesn't represent a sudden escalation, but is instead emblematic of a progression from despair to anger. Several billionaires also predicted this progression, warning their peers to ease up on their behavior. They're not listening, and some "ordinary people" seem ready to make them.
The equivalent of their level of military organization would probably not be minivans, it would be something like rolling out barbed wire, laying smoke, digging trenches with machines, mortar teams, snipers and ordinary riflemen. Something which in practice would be impossible to deal with and which would immediately necessitate negotiations.
I'm not propagating for that though, but I do think there is a similarity to the learning process-- how the Swedish peasantry chose to develop this capacity and strengthened it until it was useful.
Think of humans as these epsilon-greedy things, which with probability epsilon go and explore the payoff space. I think people see that things are being done to them that cross the line of screwing them over to something like crushing them, and this makes attempting to get back at those doing the crushing to get them to back off rational. Thus I think that it's reasonable to expect an exploration of violence to see where good payoffs can be had and where you can deterrence.
It’s like everyone forgot that we don’t actually have any way to ID the shooter (because the video never got his face), and very little physical evidence was left at the scene. The police say this Luigi guy was carrying around the murder weapon and a manifesto (that very conveniently also establishes motive), and everyone just buys it totally uncritically (and also comments on how much they like him).
I think the NYPD is simply unable to publicly admit that for their $16M per day budget they can’t ID or find a guy who shot someone on video in the middle of a public street.
People might start asking what we are getting for that money if they can’t solve simple crimes, and if perhaps the budget should be scaled back if it’s going to be so ineffective.