For those who think Robinson was “radicalized” at a University…
I actually went to Utah State University. There is no way in hell he was radicalized there. Perhaps it was a reaction to being at such a stifling conservative school and community, but the school and professors certainly did not do it.
Society tends to want to find someone "else" to blame. Maybe the dude radicalized himself. Everyone comes into contact with information every day... some of it hateful, extremist, unsolicited. Part of becoming an educated adult, is to be able place all that information in perspective. That's not the job of the hate-mongerer, the extremist, or the unsolicited pusher of information.
Each of us needs to process what we see, read, and hear and make appropriate decisions each day, throughout the day. The shooter of adult age is responsible for his poor judgment. If he is radicalized, he chose that for himself. Not his parents, not Republicans, not Democrats, not Charlie Kirk. He did this. He put his family into a living hell. And, now he needs to own the consequences no matter what kind of retribution pedophile enthusiast Cry-Baby-trump wants to unleash on anyone else.
It's the new line because they can't pigeonhole him as a lefty. And guess whose leading the chorus ;
“He went to college. That is where kids are getting radicalized. Not just online, our campuses are where a lot of radicalization, hate, and intolerance starts from.” - Fox News Host , Rachel Campos Duffy.
He only attended UVU for one semester - which is predominately conservative, then dropped out for trade school to become an electrician.
There has been speculation on social media that Robinson, may be associated with the Groyper movement. This theory gained traction after a photo surfaced showing Robinson in a black Adidas tracksuit, crouching — a pose often associated with meme culture. Some users on X have placed his image alongside a popular meme of Pepe the Frog wearing a similar outfit, labeling Robinson as a “Groyper.”
Groypers are part of a far-right, white nationalist, and Christian nationalist movement often linked to Nick Fuentes, a known Holocaust denier and prominent alt-right figure. While the term originally stemmed from internet meme culture, it has since been associated with more organized extremist ideologies.