![pewdiepie thats gay meme pewdiepie thats gay meme](https://pics.me.me/pewdiepie-donates-to-cry-media-woah-thats-interesting-but-i-38758023.png)
Memes within the manifesto serve to draw attention and pique readers’ curiosity The memetic elements of the manifesto were also most likely designed to provoke the media and the public into sharing it and debating the shooter’s actions - thereby increasing the attention, virality, and public debate surrounding the attack, and further spreading the manifesto within the mainstream.Īll of this is important to understand, not only to keep public attention focused on the shooter’s unthinkable actions instead of memes but because using memes to normalize unconscionable beliefs and behavior has become an established messaging tool for the far right. Instead, they were most likely designed to entertain his fellow extremists and, above all, to help them see him as someone to admire and even copy.
![pewdiepie thats gay meme pewdiepie thats gay meme](https://pics.onsizzle.com/this-is-life-telling-you-to-stop-doin-the-damn-1897560.png)
![pewdiepie thats gay meme pewdiepie thats gay meme](https://i.pinimg.com/736x/42/6c/a0/426ca09631ab6c2b869fbeb24f5ebea9.jpg)
The choices he made - to post a manifesto to a known radical community, and to carry out the attack as if he were doing it “for the lulz” - are unlikely to have been made at random. The shooter appears to have been very familiar with extremist corners of the internet. The guns used in the attack were also decorated with memes, mostly insider white nationalist references. Then, right before the starting the attack - which he live-streamed to Facebook as if it were a first-person shooter video game - the shooter referenced the “subscribe to PewDiePie” meme. In the post, he wrote that it was “time to stop shitposting and time to make a real life effort” - meaning, essentially, that it was time to stop fooling around on the internet and turn his extremist views into real-world action. The shooter posted the manifesto, along with a link to the forthcoming live stream of the promised attack, on 8chan, one of the main online homes of meme-loving right-wing extremists. The document rails against Muslims and immigrants and includes several references to memes and video games. Police are currently investigating a sprawling 74-page manifesto that the 28-year-old suspect allegedly wrote and posted on social media shortly before the attack. The man who allegedly shot and killed 49 people at two mosques in Christchurch, New Zealand, framed the attack as a real-life escalation of meme-based internet culture.