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Author Topic: Who Are the Shooters of San Diego Mosque?  (Read 15 times)

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Online Visualmon

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Who Are the Shooters of San Diego Mosque?
« on: Today at 01:44:26 AM »
Yep, definitely white people are the problem in America and elsewhere they cause misery to the people of colors.
https://www.instagram.com/reel/DWVrW3PiOm9/?utm_source=ig_web_copy_link&igsh=MzRlODBiNWFlZA==

Quote
reichwingwatch
🚨Authorities say the two teenage suspects in the 2026 San Diego mosque shooting left behind a manifesto filled with white supremacist, antisemitic, anti-Muslim, misogynistic, and anti-LGBTQ rhetoric, along with weapons allegedly covered in neo-N*zi symbols and extremist slogans.

Investigators say Cain Clark, 17, and Caleb Vazquez, 18, praised previous far-right mass killers including the Christchurch mosque shooter, the Buffalo supermarket shooter, and the Poway synagogue attacker. The writings reportedly embraced “accelerationism,” a neo-fascist ideology promoting violence and societal collapse to create a white ethnostate.

According to investigators and watchdog groups, the manifesto repeatedly attacked Muslims, portraying Islam as an “invasion” and describing Muslims as enemies who “don’t belong” in America. Authorities say the Islamic Center of San Diego was deliberately targeted because of the victims’ religion and ethnicity.

The writings also contained explicit hatred toward transgender people and gay people. The suspects called LGBTQ people “degenerate,” falsely linking transgender and gay people to pedophilia, and encouraging suicide. They say LGBTQ parents adopt kids to abuse them — a statement not backed up by statistics. The language mirrors rhetoric commonly found in neo-Nazi and extreme pro-MAGA online spaces. A video of pro-Trump influencer Ryley Niemi recently went viral after he confronted a gay couple with a baby and insinuated they are p*dophiles.

Antisemitism was another major theme. Authorities say the suspects repeated conspiracy theories about Jewish control and “white replacement,” ideas frequently promoted in white supremacist propaganda and in the Groyper movement.

Investigators also reportedly found far-right symbols on the suspects’ weapons and clothing, including the Sonnenrad (“Black Sun”), Celtic crosses, swastika-related imagery, and references to previous mass shooters. Law enforcement says the case highlights how extreme content online radicalizes young people with racist and violent propaganda.



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