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'I liked it': Far-left credentialed press members celebrate killing of Brian Thompson, say most Americans 'support' Luigi Mangione

"I don't give a flying f*ck he died."

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"I don't give a flying f*ck he died."

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Libby Emmons Brooklyn NY
Three credentialed journalists who run a fan girl Instagram about accused assassin Luigi Mangione spoke about the man Mangione is charged with killing UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson. Outside the New York City courthouse where Mangione faces trial, they said they were glad that Thompson was killed.

"I don't give a flying f*ck he died," said Ashley Rojas.

The three women, Abril Rios, Ashley Rojas and Lena Weissbrot, go by the Mangionistas and their Instagram is a trove of pro-Mangione content. They parrot the talking points of podcaster Hasan Piker, who said that Thompson was guilty of "mass social murder." Thompson is survived by his wife and two children.

"I think people need to know how much power they have to resist, with um, rights, like jury nullification which is information that's purposely obfuscated from the public," said Weissbrot, interviewed by The Daily News' Molly Crane-Newman.



"Especially because our government and these health insurance companies, they're literally stealing our money and using it to kill us," she went on. "Like, come on, the American people need to stand up for themselves. It's about time."

The women said they were "court watching" Mangione's court dates and revealed that they call themselves the Mangionistas. "We are a trio," said Rojas.

"We are essentially here to be Luigi Mangione's advocate as well as bring social issues to light," Rojas said. "And also having more youth engagement when it comes to social issues like this, that's our primary focus."

They said that they are there to "act as press" because they believe that "legacy media has some sort of agenda against Luigi Mangione and his supporters and we're here to prove that we have the power as people to get the public informed."

When asked, they said their issues with the press coverage of the case are "mostly the suppression over what's been going on, everything from not even mentioned that we've had an illegal cavity search done... I've yet to see any outlet report on that. And also the fact that most of this evidence was unlawfully obtained. The chain of custody is broken," she said.

On Monday, Judge Gregory Carro ruled that evidence found by police during an initial search of Mangione's possessions when he was first apprehended at an Altoona, PA McDonalds, was not admissible. Carro said that evidence that was found during a second search, back at the police station, was admissible. The second round of materials include the alleged murder weapon and a notebook detailing Mangione's motives.

Rojas said that the "only people who end up suffering is Luigi Mangione and the people because it's an insult to the intelligence of the American people."

At this, Weissbrot jumped in, saying "let's be honest, most average Americans support him. We're fed up with being exploited and treated like cattle, basically blood sacrifices to line the pockets of health insurance executives and the politicians that they bribe with our money that they're stealing from us. It's pretty sickening, you know. Other countries have had revolutions for far less. We're pretty much the most cucked and submissive population in all of human history, and I'm tired of it. It's time for everyone to grow some balls and stand on business."

In a follow-up video, Rojas said "I said what I said, I don't give a flying f*ck."

Weisbrot backed her, saying, "His children are better off without him. They need to learn to not be like their dad. And enjoy the blood money, kids."

"I'm standing on business," Rojas said, "f*ck Brian Thompson, I don't give a flying f*ck he died."

"I liked it," said Weisbrot.

"Millions of Americans suffer every single day," Rojas went on, sounding bored, "from negligence from United Healthcare." She said a baby girl died because "of how negligent her health insurance was. An infant died. So if you guys are okay with someone like Brian Thompson being around and that being part of our society then that says more about you as a person because you look absolutely monstrous defending someone like that who participates in social murder—"

"Mass social murder," Weisbrot said. "He's responsible for more deaths than Osama bin Laden and I remember Americans celebrating when Osama bin Laden was killed. It's not like we don't understand heroic violence or like when violence is good. There's a, that's like as American as America gets."

"I mean, why do we protect the Second Amendment so much," Rios said, "it is to allow people to shoot up schools, or is it to protect our democracy? I think it's to protect our democracy. I'm not saying you know we should all take up arms, but when your democracy is eroded and there's no other option, what we meant to do?"

Piker spoke on a New York Times podcast about the concept of social murder, which the Mangionistas subscribe to, saying, "Friedrich Engels wrote about the concept of social murder. And Brian Thompson, as the United Healthcare C.E.O., was engaging in a tremendous amount of social murder.

"The systematized forms of violence, the structural violence of poverty, the for-profit, paywalled system of health care in this country — and the consequences of that are tremendous amounts of pain, tremendous amounts of violence, tremendous amounts of deaths." He also believes most Americans are on board with the cold-blooded assassination of insurance company CEOs. "Luigi: The Musical" debuted in San Francisco and is making its New York premiere in June.

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