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Where our violent extremists meet

“They’re effectively terror cells with much larger goals”

Collins tweeted:

I think this article is supposed to be a dunk, but it’s true.

The communities that Crimo was in online are far more accelerationist than what’s talked about in traditional political media, and that’s gotta change. They’re effectively terror cells with much larger goals.

We’ve gotta start having bigger conversations about this stuff, about doomerism, about blackpilling, about how extremist cults online interact with everyday politics.

They do not exist in the political binary we’re used to. The internet fractured the culture in a million pieces.

We can keep shoving our heads in the sand and wake up every few days to a new mass murder, or we can recognize this new reality of how people get radicalized and try to figure it out.

There is no one immediate prescription, but snarkily writing it off has led us here.

Originally tweeted by Ben Collins (@oneunderscore__) on July 5, 2022.

Here’s Ben Collins’ article on the shooter:

Robert “Bobby” E. Crimo III, the person of interest identified by police after Monday’s shooting in a Chicago suburb that killed six people and wounded 38 others, left a long trail of tributes to mass shootings and public killings on social media platforms, according to numerous profiles that appear to belong to him.

Crimo performed as a rapper who went by the name “Awake,” whose recent music videos included depictions of mass murder.

Crimo’s most recent video posted to YouTube showed him in the aftermath of a school shooting. It ends with Crimo draping himself in an American flag. Another music video showed a cartoon depiction of a man wearing a shirt with his YouTube channel’s logo on it, holding a long gun and being shot by police.

The YouTube account that hosted his videos, which had previously been accessible to the public, was unavailable Monday night.

Crimo had his own Discord server, where fans and people who knew him would chat. The community featured a politics board filled with nihilistic political memes. The most recent post before the shooting, which was posted in March, was a picture of Budd Dwyer, the Pennsylvania state treasurer who shot and killed himself on live television in the late 1980s, along with the caption, “I wish politicians still gave speeches like this.”

On Discord, fans would share posts that Crimo had made of himself. One apparent selfie Crimo took in March reads: “Cursed image screenshot and send to everyone or commit not alive anymore,” a reference to suicide.

After Monday’s shooting, 4chan trolls invaded the community, using it as a meeting point to laud the shooter and post memes about the attack. The Discord channel was shut down around 6 p.m. ET, just hours after Crimo was named as a person of interest.

Crimo also posted frequently to a message board that discussed graphic depictions of murder, suicide and death. His most recent post to that message board came last week, when he posted a video of a beheading.

Crimo didn’t frequently post about major political figures on his websites, except for two posts about former President Donald Trump.

A video posted to Crimo’s YouTube page on Jan. 2, 2021, appears to show Crimo among a throng of protesters cheering for Trump’s presidential motorcade outside an airport. Crimo flips the phone’s orientation to reveal his face at the end of the video.

Crimo is also seen draped in a Trump flag in a June 27, 2021, post on Twitter. The post is captioned with only the word “spam.”

Mark Heymann, 22, who said he went to Highland Park High School with Crimo, said Crimo was a rapper who released music when they were in school together.

Heymann said he doesn’t recall much about Crimo. “He always seemed a little off, but I can’t describe it much beyond that,” he said.

Crimo’s father, who reportedly owned convenience stores, staged an unsuccessful run for mayor of Highland Park in 2019.

In the neighborhood, the family were known as quiet people who kept to themselves, said people who lived on the block.

Michael Gammel, who lives next door, recalled one conversation in which the elder Crimo alluded to his son having trouble at school that the father described as “emotional issues.”

Gammel and another neighbor who didn’t want to be identified recalled the younger Crimo riding around on an electric scooter with loud music playing so people knew when he came and went. The last time, Gammel said, was Monday morning about 10.

Highland Park Mayor Nancy Rotering told NBC’s “TODAY” show Tuesday that she didn’t believe Crimo was previously known to police until Monday.

She revealed she knew him when he was in the Cub Scouts, a Boy Scouts of America program for children in kindergarten to fifth grade.

“I know him as somebody who was a Cub Scout when I was the Cub Scout leader,” she said. “It’s one of those things where you step back and you say, ‘What happened? How did somebody become this angry? This hateful?’ To then take it out on innocent people who literally were having a family day out.”

When asked what he was like back then, she replied, “He was just a little boy.”

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