MenacingMonk
War & Peace
This shyt keeps getting interesting. Dude was a progressive assassin. 


That’s how you know it’s legit. It doesn’t benefit either side. The smoking gun that Conservatives were praying for ain’t in those messages. Everyone was waiting for some great manifesto of his political agenda, and all we got was some memes and a dude trying to compartmentalize what he’s done in shytposting format.
The mistake I think you’re making is the assumption that the FBI is being ran by rational actors and/or they are operating independently of the irrational actors in the White House. The truth is there is a decent chance it’s made up because these people are all morons.Again, I ask who exactly does it benefit fabricating this story?
There are two possiblities here (well, three, but the alternative to the two probable outcomes is far-fetched):
- The first of which, this exchange is legit and happened exactly as it occured between Tyler Robinson and roommate (with all the aforementioned details)
- The second of which, this exchange isn't legit and everyone involved in this operation conspired to make up this exchange (with no damning details in regards to Tyler's political motivation).
You've got to ask yourself, what is the more likely scenario using Occam's razor?
To me, if you're going to fabricate something on this scale, it's got to be worth it. It's got to have a driving purpose and this exchange lacks that, particularly when the Right have threatened civil war as avengement. There's nothing in that conversation that leads us to believe Tyler has been radicalized with some political aim that Conservatives can use to stoke their fires. There's nothing. Just a Gen Z kid who suffers from being terminally online, whose motivation was and I quote - "I had enough of his [Charlie Kirk's] hatred".
To me the exchange is a lot more believeable than believing the FBI created a story that is essentially is futile. What's the point of even releasing this exchange if you're creating a narrative when nobody from either side is left with answers to their questions.
If the exchange read something like this -
Roommate: Why did you do it?
Robinson: I did it because I've had enough of liberals standing on the sidelines while Conservatives control the narrative. It's about time we hit back. I did this for LGBTQ; I did this for Black people; I did this for all the minorities. We will rise again!
You see how this actually has some political objective that would be fodder for Trump's administration? This is something that would be worth fabricating if you were going to do it. No lol'ing about the meme engravings and talking about how your grandpa's gun did the job just fine. Why risk getting exposed of making up a story that doesn't really reveal anything, politically?
As moronic as they are, they'd still make up a story that benefited them. This story doesn't do that; it leaves us with more questions than answers. We know through their usage of AI and their perpetual pathological lying, that they're willing to make up shyt at the drop of a dime if they can weaponize it. They never let an opportunity go by without doing so.The mistake I think you’re making is the assumption that the FBI is being ran by rational actors and/or they are operating independently of the irrational actors in the White House. The truth is there is a decent chance it’s made up because these people are all morons.
The mistake I think you’re making is the assumption that the FBI is being ran by rational actors and/or they are operating independently of the irrational actors in the White House. The truth is there is a decent chance it’s made up because these people are all morons.
Another thing too that I mentioned a few posts ago - he refers to his roommate as 'his love'. Why would they falsify a story only to have Tyler refer to his roommate as his love? All these people came together to create a story and the term of endearment they came up with for a 22-year-old to use in this exchange was "love".
I mean, that is entirely plausible, but they could've easily changed it to "I love you" with different phrasing which would make it sound more legitimate than "my love". I wouldn't even say it's generic - it's old fashioned. I have a hard time believing however many people it took to conspire on this thought "my love" was the best way to go about this. This would've been vetted by numerous people to get it right and somehow they all thought "my love" sufficed.Most likely because they thought using any kind of term of endearment that could be interpreted in any way gendered would be a red flag b/c they wouldn't know if they were misusing it so they went generic as possible.