
This Minneapolis shooting turns out to be much darker than I realized yesterday, when I first wrote. The killer was quite clearly possessed, I think. I mean that literally.Ā This story from theĀ New York PostĀ details some of his chaotic, anti-Semitic, hateful beliefs, which seem to have no ideological core.Ā His transgenderism seems to have been not so much at the core of his identity, but rather one manifestation of a malignant, radically disordered mind.Ā Here is the 11-minute video he left behind, before the shooting.Ā It is a horrifying glimpse into the mind of a madman.
This page from his journal jumped out at me when I saw it yesterday:

The Russian says:

Again: possessed.
Letās not forget the valorization of revenge violence among trannies.Ā Watch this.Ā And look at this:

Peter Savodnik takes the measure of this lunatic.Ā He goes through the various āexplanationsā people have offered, in an attempt to make sense of Westmanās heinous act, and concludes:
All that finger-pointing obscures a deeper point: Westman seems to have been driven by an all-consuming, destructive force, a nihilismāthe conviction that life is meaningless; that words likeĀ truth,Ā justiceĀ andĀ GodĀ are empty slogans; that everything must be razed.
Nihilism is not some obscure academic notion. It stretches back to the 19th centuryāearly Russian radicals were called nihilistsāand it has waxed and waned across the past 150 years. Today, you can feel the nihilist impulse coursing through America, which has been mostly stripped of its faith and a shared national culture and has seen once-great institutionsāuniversities, corporations, churches, nonprofit organizations, the media, the militaryābecome engulfed in scandal and politicization.
It is an understatement to say America is struggling to infuse young Americans with a sense of purpose.
Earlier this year, the FBI introduced aĀ new category of criminal: the Nihilistic Violent Extremist, or NVE.
If jihadis kill for Allah, and anti-government extremists like Timothy McVeigh killed in the name of some demented notion of freedom, thenĀ NVEs kill simply because they want to kill. They donāt have much in the way of ideological commitmentsāas the confusing hodgepodge of aphorisms Westman scrawled into his rifle, pistol, and shotgun makes clearābeyond a commitment to chaos and evil themselves.
If we are dealing with true nihilism, then we are all in for a hell of a ride. Thereās no way to counter people who want to murder and cause havoc simply for the pleasure of doing it. Last week at the Midwestuary, I heard lots of talk about the spread of nihilism among young American males. This is the far fringe of victims of the Meaning Crisis. Max Remington texted me overnight:
America'sĀ Years of LeadĀ are going to be driven by this kind of nihilistic violence by people of all ages. America has so many lone wolves, I wouldn't rule out the possibility it could collapse the country, honestly.
I donāt know the extent of this problem in the US, nor do I know if Europe has a similar problem. But see, this is the kind of thing that David Betz is talking about when he raises the prospect of ācivil warā. It will almost certainly not be anything well-organized, he says, but rather random acts of killing, violence, and sundry mayhem, committed by people with different motives, or no motive at all other than destroying a society that they believe has failed them.
The great contemporary literary criticĀ Gary Saul Morson explains the nature of 19th century Russian nihilism, which is not the same thing as what Robin Westman might have instantiated. Excerpt:
āNihilistā and ānihilismāāterms typically attributed to novelist Ivan Turgenevāoriginally referred to a group that arose in Russia around 1860. Today we often call people nihilistic if they extend no hope that conditions can improve. Unqualified pessimists, they regard all grounds for optimism as illusory. We also use the term ānihilismā to describe extreme relativism about the bases of human knowledge. Science, in this view, is just another ideology, based, like all ideologies, on the interests of a ruling class. Accepted knowledge is nothing more than power made into a philosophy justifying it. This kind of nihilism often interprets various philosophersāHume, Nietzsche, Marx, Freud, Feyerabend, and othersāas justifying the claim that one can build on no certain āfoundations.ā
Neither understanding of nihilism applies to the original Russian nihilists. Far from despairing, they believed that they knew just how to build the perfect society, which, they also held, could be realized in a few years. Regarding āscienceā as a set of infallible (and mostly metaphysical) dogmas, they deemed their favored social theories scientific and therefore utterly beyond doubt. As their critics observed, these science worshippers missed the whole point of science, openness to contrary evidence.
The groupās leader, Nikolai Chernyshevsky (1828-1889), exercised immense influence. His utopian fiction,Ā What Is to Be Done?Ā (1863)āthe question was anything but rhetoricalābecame the most widely read book among the intelligentsia before the Revolution. Lenin credited it with making him a revolutionary, and the Soviets hailed Chernyshevsky as a thinker in the same league as Marx and Engels. Tolstoy, on the other hand, referred to him as āthat gentleman who stinks of bedbugs,ā a loathsome figure who has persuaded his followers that āto be outraged, bilious, and spiteful is a commendable thing.ā
In his novelĀ DemonsĀ (sometimes translated in English asĀ The Possessed), Dostoevsky illustrates and condemns the nihilism popular among young people of his era. His character Verkhovensky is a political nihilist, aiming to disrupt society for the sake of creating a utopian future. By contrast, Stavrogin is an existential nihilist, who truly believes life has no meaning, and who lives to channel his despair into destruction.
I have this sense that we are living in a culture accelerating towards a general calamity. Recall that when an audience member in a screening ofĀ Live Not By LiesĀ asked me earlier this year if I thought the threat of soft totalitarianism was waning because Trump is in power, and pushing back on woke, I said no. All the conditions that Arendt identified as conducive to totalitarianism are still very much with us: mass loneliness and alienation, a loss of faith in institutions and hierarchies, a love of transgression for its own sake, a willingness to believe that ātruthā is whatever satisfies oneās desires, and so forth.
We know very well where wokeness take us. I am particularly aware of how wokeness validated racial identity, and privileging racial identity. The right-wing version is now emerging ferociously. The very right-wing demons I warned many years ago that wokeness was summoning are now here. God only knows how this ends. Iāve always had a superstitious belief that the Jews are a canary in the coal mine of society: that anti-Semitism is a sure sign that a society is giving itself over to radical evil. Now we see that rising on both the Left and the Right.
Last night in Rome I was at a social event with some people from all over Europe. A couple of British interlocutors expressed extreme worry for their country. Thereās the migrant crisis, of course, but also the economic crisis, about which I knew little. They talked about how the cost of living is becoming unsustainable, and how the government is barreling towards a fiscal Armageddon. Last week, theĀ TelegraphĀ reported that the government might be forced to appeal to the International Monetary Fund for a bailout. If that happens, my British interlocutors said, thereās a very good chance that the IMF simply will not have the funds to cover Britainās debts. And if it does, the IMF will demand radical reforms, including either the slashing of pensions, the gutting of the National Health Service, or both. These are moves that the Labour government cannot politically do. So ⦠what, then?
Britain is a post-Christian society. What holds it together, and prevents it from descending into chaos and violence should the economy collapse, particularly at a time of increasing racial and religious tension?
Notice that after Nigel Farageās deportation speech, Reform has surged in popularity to the point that it has more support than the Tories and Labour combined! Has that kind of thing ever happened?

What if the same fiscal disaster happens to France, which is facing its own fast-approaching day of fiscal reckoning? Francois Bayrou, the prime minister, will have to resign in the days to come over the budget impasse. He appeared on French TV this week to say bluntly that the core problem is the Boomersā pensions, which are politically untouchable.
I also talked to a German woman, who said that her own country is headed towards fiscal disaster. She told me that she used to fear and loathe the AfD (Alternative For Germany), but after seeing how extreme the German establishment has been in trying to crush the AfD, she now sympathizes with them. A German man earlier in the evening told me the same thing.
A German court has banned an AfD candidate for running for mayor in a German city.Ā Youāll never guess why:
The exclusion began when incumbent Mayor Jutta Steinruck (formerly SPD) contacted the SPD-controlled Rhineland-Palatinate Ministry of Interior, requesting information about AfD candidate Joachim Paul from the Office for the Protection of the Constitution. The SPD-led ministry had already made headlines by announcing that civil servants expressing sympathy for the AfD would be excluded from state positions.
The resultingĀ 11-page reportĀ claimed āgood reasons to doubt Paulās loyalty to the constitution,ā citing:
A photograph: Paul posted an Instagram photo of himself with Austrian activistĀ Martin Sellner, who was banned from Germany for advocating the deportation of migrants, including those with citizenship who fail to āsufficiently assimilate.ā
The concept of āremigrationā: Paul gave a November 2023 lecture titled āImmigration: A Matter of DestinyāWhy Remigration is Necessary and Feasible.ā
Literary references: A 2022 article by Paul in the Austrian magazineĀ FreilichĀ referencedĀ TolkienāsĀ Lord of the Rings, stating, āTolkienās entire work reflects a conservative mindset of particular value to contemporary conservatism ⦠The protagonists fight for a cause greater than themselves: their homeland, the survival of their culture, a just order, the defense against a global threat.ā
Cultural interests: Paulās appreciation for WagnerāsĀ Nibelungenlied, which the report claims holds significance for him in terms of ānational pride.ā The report notes he offers video seminars on the medieval epic.
For Germanyās liberal and cultural left, all of this undoubtedly smacks of āNazi.ā But in a democracy, the question of what to make of Paulās ideas and associations should have been left to the public. Paul might not have wonāsomeĀ pollsĀ didnāt favor him despite the AfDās strong February performance in the region, where it came a very narrow firstĀ with 24.3%.Ā But the establishment wanted to take no risks, knowing full well they have lost the public struggle on migration and national values.
The dude likes Tolkien and Wagner. Clearly a Nazi!
Meanwhile, the Chief Imam of Ireland would like you to know that it was sad thatĀ an asylum seeker raped a Dutch woman and later murdered a Dutch girl the other day,Ā but society is also to blame for :::checks notes::: not telling him that rape and murder is wrong:

Poor marginalized asylum seeker. How was he to know it was wrong to rape women and murder them?
Somehow, I think the Irish, like many other Europeans, are in no mood to be talked to like this.
āWe Murder To Dissectā ā Wordsworth
A great visual representation of the Medieval versus the Modern:
