The manifesto and online posts of the accused UnitedHealthcare CEO shooter Luigi Mangione have left many on social media taking constant notice.
The man alleged to have shot and killed UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson, Luigi Mangione, has captivated the public since the incident last Wednesday (December 4) and more so as his social media history and manifesto have been revealed. Independent journalist Ken Klippenstein published the manifesto through his Substack on Tuesday (December 10), which he shared in a post on X, formerly Twitter. Klippenstein would later chastise major outlets for not attempting to publish the manifesto in another post.
I got the Luigi Mangione manifesto — the real one, not the fake one circulating online.
Here it is:https://t.co/bnlcbLxIuL
— Ken Klippenstein (@kenklippenstein) December 10, 2024
The 262-word letter addressed to “the Feds” was found on Mangione by law enforcement officials who detained him in Altoona, Pennsylvania on Monday (December 9). Mangione called out the United States for having the “most expensive healthcare system in the world,” but being only ranked 42nd in life expectancy across the globe. He attacked UnitedHealthcare in the document, stating that it was the “largest company in the US by market cap, behind only Apple, Google, Walmart.” While not naming Thompson, Mangione went on to apologize for any ripple effect of chaos but wrote, “These parasites simply had it coming.” The 26-year-old would go on to say that he respected law enforcement for what they do, and stressed that he worked alone. Mangione ended the manifesto by writing that it was “not an issue of awareness at this point, but clearly power games at play” — and declared that he’s simply “the first to face it with such brutal honesty.”
Mangione’s social media history has come under scrutiny since his apprehension, primarily on X, formerly Twitter, with some highlighting his first string of posts upon joining the platform back in 2016. Another user named BabsGrey highlighted a connection with books he read on Goodreads and an X-ray of someone getting spinal fusion treatment as his header on X, writing that “he must have gone through some kind of personal hell with insurance.”
Luigi Mangione’s twitter header has this X-Ray and his goodreads has these books…he must have gone through some kind of personal hell with insurance. pic.twitter.com/pJ3366zb5D
— Babs Gray (@BabsGray) December 9, 2024
Another user pointed out that Mangione’s last Goodreads review was of Dr. Seuss’ The Lorax, where he left five stars. “[H]is last Goodreads log being the Lorax is so funny. he said right that’s enough,” wrote the user named Rocky.
his last goodreads log being the lorax is so funny. he said right that’s enough pic.twitter.com/Il90Qrvzlo
— rocky (@WAYSTIAR) December 9, 2024