Supern✩va
1.5K posts


24 year old Craig McCracken, creator of The Powerpuff Girls (1995)



Some of the real Luigi Mangione's supporters spoke up about mainstream media's narrative trying to paint Mangione's support as "fangirls" who only care about his looks, while intentionally omitting the real advocacy surrounding Mangione's cases

Luigi Mangione was Rich. Brian Thompson, the United Healthcare CEO whom Luigi shot in the back, came from modest means. He attended public schools. So do his kids. He went to the University of Iowa, a state college. The tuition at Iowa State was about $2800/year for Brian. Brian worked his way up to becoming a CEO. Everything was given to Luigi. His all-boys elite prep school cost about $40k a year. His Ivy League college cost about $75K per year. I am not begrudging Luigi anything. His grandfather worked hard to build his fortune, and Luigi is the benefactor. That's great. It's the hypocrisy that's hard to stomach. These protesters marched over the sidewalk where Brian was shot dead in the back by Luigi. The movement seems to be shifting from Healthcare to killing CEOs to killing the Rich. What an oxymoron this is. Where does it end? Luigi has hired top dollar attorneys that only the rich can afford. As I said before, if Luigi truly believed his rhetoric, he would have gone with the public defender. These protestors are fighting for a hypocrite, not a hero. Recall that Luigi didn't even have United Healthcare. He didn't lose a family member due to a claim being denied. He received extensive medical treatment on his back and never seemed to want for anything as he traveled the World, post back surgery. Luigi is no revolutionary for a cause. Luigi is a spoiled rich kid who idolizes Ted Kaczynski, has an inflated ego, and who completely lost his moral compass. #LuigiMangione #Luigi


The @NYCMayorsOffice @MadeinNY did some incredible due diligence when issuing Lena Weissbrot her press credentials. She adds a “non-violent” disclaimer while talking about needing more “copycats” and “billionaire’s in body bags.” NYC is doing great.

The BBC is running a story trying to pull at our heartstrings for starving fathers in Afghanistan who are ready to sell their young daughters just to buy food. One man weeps while holding his seven-year-old twins, saying he'll sell one to feed the rest. Another already sold his five-year-old. I don't care how hungry I get I would never do this. Not in a million years. These beautiful, innocent little girls are being treated like goods to be traded by the very men who are supposed to protect them. Instead, they're guarded by monsters. Poverty and hunger are horrific, but selling your own child isn't an "impossible choice" it's a moral failure. The BBC can frame it as tragic desperation all they want, but we should be disgusted and outraged for the daughters, not feeling sorry for the fathers willing to do this. These children deserve real protectors, not men who see them as a survival asset. Absolutely sickening

funny how it’s always the same people running to the press who have no real understanding of the case or what they’re even advocating for. it’s “fair trial” one minute and contradictions the next, how is this “activism”? they’re not supporters, they just use his case for attention and do nothing but embarrass themselves in the process, there are people who actually care about his case and the issues around it, but they always get drowned out by the weirdos who treat his court proceedings as an opportunity to gain attention

first court apperance vs today

Colorado man's life saved after metal chain blocks bullet to the neck



















