They took down the gofundme. He’s got a bit of an online footprint that’s being actively picked over. Apparently, he got picked up in Pennsylvania, for “being weird”, presumably from staying awake most of the last week. . So far he has not said anything. Whatever manifesto they got him with has not made the rounds, and frankly I’m not overly enthused about getting ahold of it, but yeah., If I have an excess of time and money in the coming seasons . We’ll be hearing from him and helping Mr. Mangione out.

Like I said, extensive online footprint that is being picked over as we speak. I saw a LinkedIn profile that has since been deleted, but of course it was screenshot. People disappear in a lot of the important ways when they go to prison, but we’ll do what we can.

  • Drusas@fedia.io
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    2 days ago

    We don’t have to call everybody who works with code a “tech bro”. He seems like a perfectly normal and relatable person.

    But I’ve been saying that and being downvoted for it for years.

        • Duamerthrax@lemmy.world
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          I’m not sure what you’re getting at. I’m referring to how he’s being presented as a techbro and not a tech worker or how I learned he came from a rich family before I learned he has chronic back pain.

      • hark@lemmy.world
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        1 day ago

        Human interaction is important. One of the problems with capitalism is the commodification of that human interaction (or what that human interaction used to provide for free). Really only the last point diverges, but it is somewhat related in that a shared set of activities can bring forth positive human interactions (e.g. progressive movements have come up or gained momentum from church gatherings, see the civil rights movement in the US).

    • chonglibloodsport@lemmy.world
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      2 days ago

      Maybe you relate to people who went to a $40k/year private high school. I certainly don’t. I even interned as a math teacher at such a school.

      Try getting kids to study algebra when they just missed 2 months of school on a vacation with their parents backpacking through Europe.

      • Drusas@fedia.io
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        22 hours ago

        I taught school in a correctional facility for youth. I was the first person on either side of my family to get a college degree. I was given chicken bouillon as a kid when I was hungry and we didn’t have food and wore hand me downs.

        So no. Fuck off with your assumptions.

      • halfatank@lemmy.world
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        2 days ago

        Family supposedly owns a country club. Prominent baltimore family. If that is so, that is definitely up there in the capitalist class and not working class. Still was rooting for him. Just would have been alot cooler if was a working class guy.

        • inv3r5ion@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          10 hours ago

          If you look at history a lot of revolutions start with someone pretty close to or even part of the bourgeoisie.

        • HasturInYellow@lemmy.world
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          1 day ago

          Class traitors from the owner class are welcomed with open arms. This only proves that anyone can do something good in the world.

        • Ricky Rigatoni@lemm.ee
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          1 day ago

          Working class people can’t get time off work to do their assassinations. If they could the world would be a better place.

          • JovialMicrobial@lemm.ee
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            1 day ago

            Someone higher up the ladder actually cared about us down below. Empathy is a hell of a drug. “If it’s this bad for me it must be even worse for others.”

    • taiyang@lemmy.world
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      2 days ago

      If anything it sounded like he wanted to be a game dev and gave up on it (probably because it actually kind of sucks as a cog in a AAA company) and that sounds like a ton of people I know.

      • Drusas@fedia.io
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        22 hours ago

        He’s relatable because, aside from going to fancy schools, his life experiences are very similar to mine.

      • Aceticon@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        2 days ago

        I worked in Tech Startups, not in the Valley but in London UK, and the Tech Bros aren’t the Techies, they’re the Founders and nowadays (unlike back in the 90s when I also was in the Industry) Founders are generally not Techies but rather people from a salesmanship-heavy background (so Finance types, Marketing types and so on).

        Blaming Techies for the shit from Tech Bros is just profound ignorance, since the mindset that make a person good at coding (such as attention to detail and favoring precisision and clarity) are the very opposite of the Tech Bro behaviour (promising the impossible, weaving fantastic stories about Tech and making broad and vague claims about how Society works and what Tech can do).

      • LillyPip@lemmy.ca
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        2 days ago

        I worked in tech for decades. We’re not all ‘tech bros’, bro. Most people I worked with are entirely normal.

    • halfatank@lemmy.world
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      If he didn’t. He is fixing to be even more wealthy. Like its some kind of big PR move and he already has a screenplay ready to sell.

  • capital@lemmy.world
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    2 days ago

    Side note, The Back Mechanic really helped me.

    Years of chiropractic didn’t fix shit. Couple weeks following that book? Huge improvement.

    • BlueTardis@sh.itjust.works
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      2 days ago

      You want a quality physiotherapist not a chiropractor. This is what much of the rest of the world does without marketing.

      • lightnsfw@reddthat.com
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        1 day ago

        Starting lifting weights fixed all my back issues. I didn’t have anything major going on and if you do you should definitely see a professional but if you’re just having aches and pains it could be that you just need to work your body more.

    • Cris@lemmy.world
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      2 days ago

      Thats awesome!

      Unfortunately I’m not suprised chiropracics didn’t help, it’s rooted in complete bunk pseudoscience, which is frustrating when they take money from people who really need help with chronic pain or other ailments

      I’m really glad you were able to find your solution, back issues are miserable

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        2 days ago

        Anecdotal, but I know someone who has back problems and goes to a back quacker once a week and it does help him.

        Would I go to one? Probably not, I would rather have someone walk on my back to pop those hard to crack spots, like the upper back, instead of risk internal decapitation because some jackass got a certificate online.

          • Death_Equity@lemmy.world
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            1 day ago

            His insurance pays for it and the alternative is major surgery that is expensive that will likely result in needing another surgery to fuse a few vertebrae which will make his job harder and likely result in him still having back pain. So the “solution” will be a net negative.

        • Cris@lemmy.world
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          2 days ago

          My understanding is that some chiropractors have adapted to methods that will actually help people and reconciled chiropractics with what they’ve found works, but the theory behind chiropractics is still fundamentally pseudo science. Like if you go look it up it’s genuinely ridiculous and makes no sense.

          If someone is debating going to a chiropractor they’d almost certainly be at least as well served by going to a physical therapist instead.

          That being said, the financial experience and experience of being cared for might be a meaningful difference between the two, I’m not sure. My impression is that a lot of pseudoscientific medical interventions have draw because they often treat people like human beings in a way that our medical system is dystinctly bad at.

          Ultimately, I’m glad your friend is getting what they need, regardless of where they’re getting it :) people deserve access to meaningful help with the problems affecting their lives

          • over_clox@lemmy.world
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            2 days ago

            I’ve had friends suggest a chiropractor when I slipped a disc in my neck around 2010. I had doctors suggest a physical therapist for the same issue.

            The doctors told me to go outside and look up and to the right to find the physical therapy office. Well, I literally couldn’t look neither up nor to the right. Like they gave a shit, they couldn’t even be bothered to take me to the elevator to the physical therapy department!

            I said fuck all that shit and drove back home, and suffered for another 5 weeks or so, until I finally got a sense of my own pains to just take care of it myself.

            I ended up rolling my pillow up tighter than a Cuban cigar and laying it strategically under my neck while I slept, to induce something of a homemade ‘traction’ plus a somewhat comfortable curve on my neck, to relax the slipped disc.

            And sure enough it actually worked! By the next day, I woke up and my pinched nerve was gone! My neck muscles were still sore though, so I took it real easy for the next week or so.

            TL;DR - They don’t give a shit about you, unless you can make it rain money. And speaking of money, I’ll never pay a medical bill where doctors neglected me or caused me more harm.

            I ain’t about to condone what the dude did, whether it’s actually him or not, but I’m not mad about it either. Fuckem.

    • aislopmukbang@sh.itjust.works
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      Can we stop posting this? Likely fake. It has been circulated as the manifesto, but is roughly 1500 words despite authorities stating the real one is handwritten and 262 words.

      Also if you look at snapshot history, there are only any from today and yesterday.

      • borf@lemmynsfw.com
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        It rings true to me and I have not seen it debunked.

        Just because he had something written on his person doesn’t mean he wouldn’t post more elsewhere. He scheduled Youtube videos to come out, too.

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          Just finished reading it and the beliefs it espouses don’t seem consistent with what we’ve uncovered so far about his social media activity. That manifesto reads like it was written by an anarchist, and everything else on Luigi’s social media suggests he was more of a libertarian techbro.

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      Just feel the need to remind everyone that this is unverified and Ken Klippensten on Bluesky is saying he does think it’s real

    • xtr0n@sh.itjust.works
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      Wow. She had enough money to live in a million dollar house, send her kids to expensive prep schools but that kind of money is nothing in the face of severe medical expenses in the US of A. It’s worth remembering that if you don’t have 10’s of millions or really hundreds of millions of dollars, you’re a bad medical situation away from physical, mental and financial ruin.

    • LillyPip@lemmy.ca
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      2 days ago

      Oh my god, his mother’s story is nearly identical to mine, down to the same tests and meds (steroids don’t work, and now I take gabapentin and tizanidine, along with enough acetaminophen to thoroughly wreck my liver). My neuropathy is secondary to other things, but there’s no hope of relief because care has become too expensive.

      I know too well we’re all just one health incident away from ruin. I was in tech and had a good career, which is gone now – along with my health insurance, since it was tied to my job. Medicare is broken, and I can’t afford the required gap insurance. I’ve become destitute, can’t afford food or copays, and am now staring down homelessness. Of course the stress of it all just makes my health worse.

      I fully understand and empathise with him. It’s unfair and tragic that the system has pushed him to this, all so greedy sociopaths can become richer.

    • stelelor@lemmy.ca
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      2 days ago

      Holy fuck. Luigi Mangione is a hero. May he live to find a cure for his pain, and may his name inspire us to take action.