Panic World - BONUS: The new age of terror
Episode Date: September 8, 2025On Wednesday, June 27th there was a shooting at a Minneapolis Catholic school, killing two kids and injuring a dozen more people. The shooter took her own life, and left behind two YouTube videos and ...a manifesto that were dogwhistles for both The Order of Nine Angles (O9A) and 764, the latter of which we've previously covered on the show. Ryan & Grant talk about both of these networks and how the mainstream news and the internet have responded. Want to hear the rest of the conversation? For the month of September, we're offering 90% off the Panic World Patreon. Use code PANICYEAR at checkout to pay just fifty cents to get ad-free and extended episodes, bonus episodes, and access to our Discord. Sign up at: https://www.patreon.com/PanicWorld. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Let me get my local going one sec.
It's been a while since I've done this.
Hope I remember how.
Yeah, you're feeling refreshed.
I am.
You're feeling great.
Went on a road trip across America.
It was really lovely.
My big revelation is that people from Pennsylvania are psychos and they want to kill you on the road.
They don't value their life or yours.
Yeah, other
Yeah, great, great vacation, feeling very refreshed.
So you're ready to talk about the worst shit ever?
I'm, I'm fascinated to talk about this
because when we did the episode,
it was something I did not,
it was something I was actively ignoring.
I put it in my, like, I'm not going to deal with this pile.
And now I have sort of gotten a better sense
of how it fits into the grander scheme of things.
All right, well, let me,
Let's set it up so people actually know what we're talking about.
I'm Grant Irving.
This is Panic World, a show about how the internet warps our minds, our culture, and eventually reality.
Joining me, host of the show, a guy who's really happy to be back from vacation, Ryan Broderick.
This is the longest we've gone without seeing each other since we've been doing this.
I really enjoyed it.
I really enjoyed not having to do this show or talk to you for several weeks.
It was great.
I wasn't going through withdrawals at all.
You were.
You found many reasons to message me, Mr. Grant, actually.
We have things to talk about.
I'm just going to cut this.
We can debate this tonight.
That sounds like we live together.
We're seeing each other for drinks afterwards.
That's what's happening.
Right.
We're not in some sort of fucked up Bert and Ernie situation.
I mean, once we start the compound, and you, too, listener, can become part of the compound.
This is the thing that you have brought up before, and I want no part of the compound.
of it. Has it? Jesus Christ. All right. Lock it in. So we think we figured at some point we would
have to do a follow-up to our 764 episode. But unfortunately, that happened sooner than later.
On Wednesday, June 27th, there was a shooting at a Catholic school, killing an 8-year-old and a 10-year-old
and injuring over a dozen more people. The shooter Robin Westman was 23 years old and took their
own life. So just before we get any further into this, typically I wouldn't name the shooter,
but we're going to be talking about, you know, the shooter's background and what larger network of
extremists they're connected to. Also, there's a lot of discourse, a lot of confusion around the
gender identity of the shooter. For the simplicity's sake, we're going to use what law enforcement
is using and what was on the shooter's license, which is,
she-her pronouns. They go by Robin Westman. There is a lot of chatter online about whether or not
Westman was a D-transitioner, and it's going to be part of sort of the larger conversation we're
having today, but just for simplicity's sake, we're going to be using she-her.
Good, good to note. Before we get into Robin and everything about this specifically,
do you have a process as a journalist when you're seeing that there's a mass casualty
event has it changed over the years? What like what do you do when you see that this is coming up?
It's definitely a change over the years. My first week on a real news desk was Sandy Hook. I was a community
moderator working in a different part of the newsroom and it was all hands on deck. Back in those days,
I didn't have a work laptop. So I'd actually drag my I Mac over to the news desk and sit underneath
the TV screen. And my job for many years,
years was quickly digging through the internet for leads, whether that may be the identity of the
shooter, the shooter's manifesto, or what you would call OSINT, open source investigation.
So I was doing a lot of that work.
I thankfully don't do a lot of that work anymore.
The news cycle has changed a lot.
Like there's, like garbage day is not a 24-7 newsroom, so we're not really doing that kind of
stuff, but my Twitter in particular is definitely still set up for that kind of work.
So it lit up really fast during this shooting, which has kind of led to this episode, which,
you know, watching the internet digest this, pull this apart and how different the conversations
have been online versus how they've been in major news organizations and in law enforcement
sources has been fascinating, to say the least.
Yeah, so we will, that's where we'll be going for the second half of the episode, but let's just lay out the basics first.
The shooter attacked at Catholic school.
She left behind two YouTube videos and a manifesto.
And I think I mentioned at the top, but she also took her own life too.
So like the plan was in place for the clues to be left to be left behind to be despolled.
Can you talk to us about her YouTube page and how it's been interpreted?
Well, the major thing here is the connection to 09A or the Order of Nine Angels, a neo-Nazi, quote-unquote, satanic extremist group, you know, tendentially connected to the larger Com network, which is what we did an episode about earlier this year.
And I've gone down the rabbit hole a bit on this.
And it seems like what a lot of users are finding out is like the stuff that Westman wrote on the gun, on the bullet cartriages, like, dog whistles the order of Nine Angels.
Yes.
That seems to be the big thing here, which has let everyone.
to think there's that and then there's an identical selfie effectively like I think we talked about
in the episode but like a selfie you would take for submission to to the game that that's what
people are kind of latching onto here and saying this might be connected to the com network
might be connected and we whether that is ever able to be totally confirmed or not we do see
all of this from what we've been able to glean we do see all of the same inspiration points and
fixations so mark andre argentino uh who we refer to and we spoke to for the seven six four episode
uh you know went through the the the manifesto and and inside there it said i indulged in every
school shooting video i can find my interest in school shooting started in seventh grade i remember
one day talking to redacted name, my crush, and another kid.
I asked him if there's a score shooting, what would they do?
So this sort of valorization of spree shooters, this sort of fixation had gone uninterrupted
for a very long time, which is exactly, you know, what we saw from the people who we
directly know were connected to calm.
There was a period of fascination that, like, led into discourse, led into,
groups that led into actual action.
So this looks to be like a similar process.
Yeah.
In terms of like what specifically was on the YouTube channel, it was a 20 minute video
of what seems to be Westman, silently turning the pages of a manifesto.
And the manifesto like most spree shooter, most extremist manifestos is nonsense.
It is racist.
It is anti-trans.
It is pro-trans.
It is pro-communist.
It is anti-communist.
It is totally incoherent, which is not abnormal for something like this.
I've read a few of them over the years, and all of them are mind conf level nuts.
Yeah, and along with all the pages on how good it's going to feel to be like become one of these heroes.
There was also on page 261 through 270.
I want someone to stop me, but they won't, no one sees it.
So, like, contradicting both in motive and what they want and in Target,
on one of the guns, it said, let me get it directly.
There is no message, which I think is the heart of it.
This sort of actually should lead us to, like, the next section here to talk about,
which is like, is this nihilism?
because I saw this in a lot of the comments, and I got a few messages from listeners after our episode on the Com network about whether or not this is nihilism, which I think is a fair point.
For simplicity's sake, that's what I was sort of calling it.
And it's also what they call it internally.
It is.
I think a more accurate way to describe it is accelerationist violence.
Yes.
I think it's nihilistic in the sense that they don't really care what that accelerationist violence accomplishes other than chaos.
and misery for now.
Because as we have seen with this shooting is like there are pockets of these, you know,
young people who are completely radicalized by the internet and radicalized in ways that
don't make any sense other than that they're angry and they want to hurt people.
But there are like more coherent extremist cells on the periphery of this network that do have
larger political goals in mind.
That is, I think, where things get kind of confusing.
Yes.
So you can read a manifesto like Westmans and go, well, this is just total nonsense.
They just wanted to hurt people.
But then if you go down the rabbit hole and you start reading about something like the
Order of Nine Angels or whatever, you can absolutely see what they want to turn society into.
And I think in many ways, a lot of these shootings that are connected to the Com network should be seen.
as sort of maybe not dupes and maybe not like they're tricked,
but they are clearly the foot soldiers for more coherent extremist politics.
Yeah, and what's so insidious about this is you get somebody who needs desperate help
and becomes fixated on this stuff at a young age.
And whether or not they're directly groomed or connected or not,
there's enough information online.
that they can copy and study what other people have done,
and that furthers this sort of accelerationism.
So whether or not Robin was directly in touch or just studying it
and took the same, you know, put the same kind of symbols on there
and was directly in contact that, like, it's good information to know,
but regardless that information is out there for them,
for her to be mimicking regardless.
Right.
And I think this is actually,
actually a really important point here, which is that if you think of school shootings,
but let's blow that up a bit to just say like spree shootings in America, because they're not
always in schools anymore. But if you think of them in terms of waves, the first wave, the first
sort of initial incident would be Columbine. And you see some activity between Columbine and the
2010s and there is that. But then in the 2010s, you see the second wave, which I would
largely categorize as in-cell-based. And that starts to give way a little bit to things like
the Maga-bomber and more expressively right-wing, far-right mass casualty violence. But I actually
think we are now firmly in a third wave where it is kids largely young people who have grown up in a
world where this has always existed and their relationship with it I think is quite different.
The way that they are talking about it, the way that they, the way they understand it seems to be
different. There's a there's a level of worship that I did not see with the in-cell.
mass violence. I, I, I, there's a, there's more out there. There's more resources. You can read more.
You can understand it. And like, and in the same way that, you know, Gen Z memes don't make a ton of
sense to millennials, the way that their manifestos read, the way that they're networking with each other,
is quite different and is based on a lot more references and remixes of previous mash casualty events.
I know that I'm sort of talking about this in a really weird.
like media way
but I think we do have to
think of a mass casualty event
as a media type
it clearly is to these kids
to these young people
yeah yeah
and they are they are playing with it
in the same way that you would play with a meme
I know that that is really callous to say
but that is what's happening no no I think that gets it
exactly with like that is how it's spreading
and looking at these as as isolated incidents
as opposed to
trends and and memes is entirely right.
Like I think that brings us directly to this post, right?
Can you explain this tweet and these pictures?
I think it really gets at this in like a really jarring way.
Yeah, this is sort of what made me think of that, actually.
So this is a post from an ex-user with the unfortunate username Hold Donor.
Um, but they're probably funding in other contexts.
Yeah.
Uh, yeah, but so they write someone that's not the FBI or the CIA, they're involved and love it.
I'm not really sure about that one, but like let's table that for now.
Needs to do a deep dive into 09A seven, six four, because I don't understand it, but there's definitely something insane happening.
And it's three pictures.
One is Westman and the other two are two previous spree shooters.
and all of them are taking a mirror selfie.
And we had talked about this in the Com Network episode
where there is a effectively like a submission process
for a lot of these incidents,
whether it's something like doxing or hacking
or shooting up a public space,
you want credit for it in the network
because you've been groomed and radicalized by these other users
into doing something to impress them.
That's the psychology.
the core psychology here.
So it seems to be that at least three school shooters have iterated on each other.
And in fact, the two other school shooters that were talking about, Wisconsin school shooter,
Natalie Rupnow and Solomon Henderson, a 15-year-old and a 17-year-old,
were in contact with each other, according to law enforcement.
So there is some sort of networking happening here.
And all three of these shooters have taken nearly identical mirror selfies.
Yeah.
In my mind, that is clearly to be submitted to a telegram channel.
Like that that's sort of what I see happening here.
But it could also just be you take it and you know that they're going to find it.
Like the people in the comm network and put it in there for you after you're dead or whatever in jail.
But there's clearly a process.
It kind of reminds me of ISIS, I think it was ISIS, where it was like, we people were training,
but now we're able to put enough information out online that lone wolves can act.
And insidiously, this can work exactly the same way where, like, they can be in contact,
they can be being provoked to actually, like, push, as we talked about in our 7, 6,4 episode,
to push to actually, like, commit a horrible act.
But it can also just be like you're not connected or you're just a lurker because all this,
is out there and you're able and and you mimic the same things and it spreads either way.
Yes.
That's the danger.
And I think how widespread this is and the impact of it is is where we want to go.
But before we do, I think it's good for us to talk about how legacy media has been talking and the right has been talking.
This was a perceived as a trans person attacking a Catholic school.
And like there's obvious polemics about that.
And, like, I think another thing we talked about in the last episode was, like, this is just so ripe for a moral panic that doesn't address the actual very real, very scary issue.
And I worry that we're starting to see that's starting to come into effect.
Yeah.
So the gender identity of the shooter is obviously a huge dimension to this.
I believe was the New York Post published a headline Minneapolis school shooter Robin Westman confessed.
sorry, there's no way to do this gracefully.
I'm reading the headline here for listeners.
Minneapolis school shooter Robin Westman confessed he was tired of being trans.
I wish I never brainwashed myself, which a lot of users are pointing at as proof that
Westman was a detransitioner, which is a whole other pocket of stuff to talk about that we're not
going to be touching today, really.
there's a lot of questions about
Westman's political leanings.
She had written Fuck Trump
on her guns or whatever
but she also wrote a ton of
like Holocaust denial stuff too.
So like it.
Anti-immigrant stuff talked about maybe shooting up a synagogue
like it's meant to be
this was a confused person who needed help.
And they also,
it's been known that these kind of shooters
do things to make it confusing
because it provides
a never level of fuckery
for people where they
mess with whether or not there's a motive.
I read this stuff on her guns
as just like
baseline shit posting.
I mean, one of them said,
I'm the woker baby,
why so querious?
Which, I mean, goes hard.
Yeah, sure.
Uh, it's, but I didn't.
No, but like, it does.
All right.
But this is, this is someone who's like terminally online.
Yeah.
And there is no point.
There's no benefit to trying to read into that in the same way that like,
I would not spend time trying to decipher like what some like internet kitty on X was talking about,
really like it doesn't matter because like they don't want it to matter yeah um a lot of the current way
that like young people talk online is actually to break like communication to break the algorithm
what's another example of that you can listen to any episode of panic world from the last nine months
uh dear listener if you want an example no i mean uh a lot of genzy slang is like kind of aping
the style of like brain rot nonsense that they see online and I think it's a little ironic now
and and the confusion that she seems to be expressing about her gender identity and her politics
and all the rest of it reeks of bucket of crabs discord server behavior like it like it like
it just stinks of someone who like has spent so much time in shitty little chat rooms with
shitty little people.
Like that,
like that,
everything about this just stinks of it to me.
I,
it's,
it's not,
um,
a victim of the algorithm,
but like,
I think you can look at this all as a,
a victim of what we got into in the adolescence episode of like a lack of
equipped adults,
a lack of any sort of social safety net.
And like,
uh,
you know,
the door shut and a,
and a teenager is alone with a computer without any,
without any sort of anyone having any insight,
which is like it's a much large,
like what adolescents did a great job of showing
was that it was a much larger societal failing
and bafflement by adults who have no sense of like how to like
even read the messages of like what is happening or like how to intervene.
Yeah, like, so this is a young adult who has clearly just been online a lot.
And they are not someone watching like Ben Shapiro or Theo Vaughn or something.
They are someone who is making ironic terminally online ship poster jokes in telegram channels and discord servers and getting obsessed with like niche satanic neo-Nazi groups and stuff.
And that is that is not like a thing you can put on the, you can't blame big tech for that.
That is solely a breakdown of society that is so large and existential that it's hard to talk about.
We can blame big tech a little bit.
Here's what I'll compare it to, actually.
I think I've told this story before or I've mentioned it before, but it is a story that has stuck with me for many years.
It was my first time ever being sent out to report on a larger feature.
I had been following for months, similar to this, actually, I've been following for months
references in tabloids to a dangerous app called Ask FM.
And it was essentially like an anonymous, you could, people could ask you questions and you
could answer, but it was anonymous.
And it was being connected to bullying and subsequent suicides.
So I was waiting for one, sorry, this is like journalism talk, but like I was waiting for
one to happen in America to do a larger look at like how does this work. And lo and behold,
what happens? It happens in Lakeland, Florida. It's a 13-year-old girl. She climbs to the top of a
cement mixer in her local neighborhood and jumps off of it one morning. So I go down there and I go to a
PTA meeting hosted by the local sheriff who is exasperated and he's crying and he's telling
parents that they need to unplug their routers so that the internet can't get their children
to which one parent said, well, they have cellular connection on their phone, so I don't know,
you know, what are we supposed to do?
And I met with some of her friends.
I met with her sister and a local Burger King, and we sat and we talked for a while.
And what came into picture for me was that there was a mean girl at the school who didn't
like this other girl. And they were using the internet to bully her, but they were using not the
internet to bully her. It was, the internet could have been removed entirely from the story.
And there's a good chance it would have ended the exact same way. It was a, it was a story
that really changed the way I think about the internet because now I sort of divide it into two
groups. One is automated, the automated internet. And that's where you can say like, that is
Mark Zuckerberg's creation.
That is the people on Instagram who are being told by an algorithm
than to put onions on their feet to go to sleep.
Eating disorder content, flooding somebody's...
Well, that's a weird one.
And I don't bring that one up because that's a weird one.
Because as we learned in our episode, that is pre-algrimic.
The other bucket that I put things in is people.
And those are stories that would be almost exactly the same
if the internet was never invented.
And the problems that you get to,
things like non-consensual sharing of sexual material,
eating disorder content to a degree,
stochastic violence and extremism,
these things are amplified by the internet,
but they existed before the internet.
And they can exist without public platforms in a lot of ways.
And after COVID,
a lot of what we call dark,
social so messaging apps email the the the social networking that you don't see got better discord
got really good telegram WhatsApp snapchat in america and those apps you can't track those apps
are largely black boxes and there's no way to know really what's going on in there and so
i look at the shooters profile the little we know now and i think okay like
Like, no, no person in society could have, could be expected to understand what was going on in their head in their head.
That, that's, that's the sort of depressing existential terror of this for me.
It's like, this is just someone who was like poking around the internet.
The failure happened a long time before starting, you know, if we take them, if we take her out of way before.
At first saying that I became obsessed with Columbine in seventh grade.
Like there was plenty of opportunity.
We created a society where Columbine happened.
Yeah.
like this is and this is this is this is just another part of the domino and uh and i and i do think
we should um mention but not linger on that this was a person who had zero uh training seemingly
before this but then was was in a period of 96 days able to arm themselves to the t and
sure and plot things and like there's a failure emotionally and then there's a failure emotionally and then
there's the failure practically that we have basically given up on addressing making something
like this like if somebody's like suddenly buying a ton of guns in a short period of time
I mean but like we just skip over that part because we've all accepted that nothing will be done
ever yeah I mean I don't even bring it up anymore right exactly and I and I just wanted to
at least mention the glaring thing but like what else is there to say thoughts and prayers
on the other side, on the Patreon,
we're going to get into how this connects to the man leading America into full ruins.
Of course, I'm talking about big balls.
That's on the Patreon.
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