Tldw: based on everything we've seen of this dude so far, the details don't really add up. It seems really unlikely that after everything he would get nabbed looking suspicious at a McDonald's, with a written manifesto on his person. Could be wrong, it's just speculation. But personally I'll be expecting more news on this, unless nothing happens for like a week.
What if it's a duo / group and they intentionally got someone caught who will have a rock solid alibi after letting investigators waste days on him, but also getting other bits and pieces of message out the entire time?
I think this is about as likely as other conspiracy theories: not at all.
We're going to find out that he's just a guy. Which is disheartening when we imagine someone coming along and saving us and setting right all the wrongs.
But also he's just a guy. I'm not saying killing is the way forward, but he inspires the belief that we can change the world ourselves. We don't just live in a world controlled by the rich or shadowy conspiracies; we live in a world where we can have an impact.
As somebody active in the politicization of tech workers, I see this as a great challenge to the stale narrative that tech workers are selfish, childish, passive. Both Luigi Mangione and Aaron Bushnel are tech workers and they are enough to prove a point.
Technicians (not limited to people working with computers) always have it hard when they work purely in support capacity. This is like draining then fir everything they've got and looking for an opportunity to beat them down further so they stay in their abused state.
The three-page, handwritten document found on him suggested a motive, according to investigators. The pages expressed "ill will" towards corporate America, they said.
Why does he have a random handwritten note "found" on him? What was he planning on doing with it?
One thing to note is that the campaign to make him into a 'broken', 'damaged' individual is well underway in the media. There's nothing positive about being well-adjusted to a harmful system, and being broken by a harmful system is not a personal failing.
Is he going to be a perfectly polite, mild-mannered person in court? Maybe not. But don't let yourself be tricked into the narrative that this discredits his reasoning, or into thinking his actions are the result of some personal failing rather than a reasonable reaction to a harmful system.