Darrin and all the idiots trying to make this guy Walz's assassin
...in correspondence with The New York Times through the jail’s electronic messaging service, Mr. Boelter suggested that the bloodshed was partly rooted in the Christian commandment to love one’s neighbor. “Because I love my neighbors prior to June 14th I conducted a 2 year long undercover investigation,” he wrote.
His cryptic messages to The Times, which also referred to a mysterious military operation, seemed disconnected from reality and in keeping with various handwritten notes of his recovered by law enforcement. They suggest a man in the throes of grandiose delusion, one who saw himself as somehow chosen to save the country by taking extreme action.
“Doing what most people know needs to be done,” he wrote to himself, “but are not willing to do it themselves.”
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Jeff Petricka, a friend who lived on the same dorm floor, knew the reason [Boelter quit his college baseball team]: religion. He said Mr. Boelter told him that he had met some people off-campus and would now be leading an uncluttered life dedicated to Jesus Christ.
“He went from being a good, all-around decent friend to, like, a hypnotic zombie,” said Mr. Petricka, who recalled buying a stereo and a baseball bat from Mr. Boelter for almost nothing.
Mr. Petricka said that Mr. Boelter alienated dorm mates by saying they were condemned to , and disrupted a campus event by calling the guest speaker, a writer from Playboy, a -bound tool of Satan. “He was screaming and shaking,” he said. “He was just out of his mind.”
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[Boelter] chastised others for being failed Christians, printed a pamphlet to hand out — he told The Times that its le was “He Touched Me in Sleepy Eye, Minnesota, and I Have Never Been the Same” — and set fire to his belongings.
“Burned it all,” said David Carlson, a friend of Mr. Boelter’s since the fourth grade.
He also set up a tent in a park in Sleepy Eye, where his proselytizing had residents calling him “the preacher,” Mr. Carlson said. “He was a totally different person.”
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[Boelter] ended his studies at St. Cloud and moved to Dallas to attend Christ for the Nations Ins ute, an unaccredited school founded two decades earlier by Gordon Lindsay, who had made his name as a traveling Pentecostal preacher emphasizing miraculous healing. The ins ute prepares most of its students, many of whom are from other countries, for some form of Christian ministry.
In the late 1980s, students like Mr. Boelter followed certain rules: An 11 p.m. curfew. Attendance at chapel every weekday and Wednesday evening. No beards or tennis shoes in class. And if you wanted to check out a basketball at the gym, you first had to recite a Bible verse.
Students at Christ for the Nations debated several charismatic Christian theological ideas that encouraged believers to seize power on God’s behalf, including one theory that some individuals could become immortal.
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/07/19/u...e=articleShare
The rest of it describes his weird professional downward spiral due in no small part to his evangelical calling to the Democratic Republic of Congo.
I welcome ST Trump s to reconcile these facts with their Walz hitman fantasies.

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Darrin and all the idiots trying to make this guy Walz's assassin
es.
after all this time you didn't do even a cursory search about the right wing Trump supporting Christian nationalist nutbag assassin.
