It happens so often, I almost missed the news alert.
During the tail end of a year full of loss and anger, police reported an angry man with a gun committed a mass shooting in Denver. Like so many of these stories go, it seems he was radicalized online by violent rhetoric that has long been closely associated with white supremacy and, of course, extreme misogyny.
It’s a tale, not as old as time, but certainly frustratingly familiar to Americans.
If my language feels flip, it’s because I’m exhausted. The angry man who hates women online so often turns into the angry man who opens fire — in a school, in a movie theater, on a city block, in his home, in a tattoo shop. It’s a tale, not as old as time, but certainly frustratingly familiar to Americans.
During the evening hours of Dec. 27, police said Lyndon McLeod began a killing spree that eventually left six people dead, including him. (McLeod was killed in an exchange of gunfire with law enforcement.) In the hours and days after the story broke, just another one of the nearly 700 mass shootings that occurred in the United States in 2021, reports began to surface about McLeod — information that may shed light on his motivations and that fits terrifyingly well into a larger pattern of gun violence in the United States.
McLeod, it turns out, had a social media account that echoed the familiar trifecta of white supremacy, male supremacy and the fetishization of gun violence.
“Aggro white males ARE violent & will be more violent as they are made irrelevant by a country that HATES them,” McLeod is believed to have written on his now-suspended Twitter account, under the alias Roman McClay. “Their limbic system is in revolt against the modern world. War is coming.”
The 47-year-old seems to have frequently posted online about the necessity of female chastity, the “suppression” of alpha male “honor violence,” neo-Nazism and the plight of “white males.” He’s even believed to have written a series of books, which according to reviewers were “packed full of rants on diversity, women, and globalization” and which followed a character named Lyndon McLeod who commits 46 murders. (The three-book series has since been removed from Amazon.) And according to The Associated Press, the majority of the victims of last week’s shooting were known to McLeod, either professionally or personally. He had been under investigation by authorities in 2020 and 2021, though never charged with anything.
But this story, while surfacing briefly, disappeared quickly from the national media landscape. If you missed it, like I did initially, it’s worth asking why. Are we so frequently forced to contend with mass gun violence, spurred by the dissemination of white supremacist and misogynist ideology, that it barely registers anymore?
McLeod’s past writings are terrifying on their own. But his exhausting predictability is arguably worse.
The vast majority of mass killers are men. According to research conducted by Everytown for Gun Safety, a family member or intimate partner of the perpetrator was shot in more than half of the mass shootings that occurred in the U.S. between 2009 and 2020.
It feels almost a bygone conclusion at this point that a mass shooter will have a history of domestic violence and/or a connection to the “manosphere.”
It feels almost a bygone conclusion at this point that a mass shooter will have a history of domestic violence and/or a connection to the “manosphere” — online hotbeds of misogyny, like the incel (“involuntary celibates”) community or men’s rights activists. Elliot Rodger, who killed six people and injured 14 in Isla Vista, California, in 2014, wanted to punish women who had sexually rejected him. Connor Betts, who killed nine in Dayton, Ohio, in 2019, had kept a hit list of female classmates he wanted to kill or rape. Scott P. Beierle, who shot up a yoga studio in Tallahassee, Florida, in 2018, had been twice charged with battery and likened his younger self to Rodger in a video.
McLeod reportedly raged about women who have premarital sex and the way that “females are scamming/disrespecting incessantly.”








