WaPo Reporter Who Blamed Libs of TikTok for Random Threats Defends Alleged CEO Murderer Mangione: ‘Morally Good Man’

The article discusses the controversy surrounding journalist Taylor Lorenz, who previously worked at The Washington Post and has since started her own Substack. lorenz garnered attention for her criticism of Chaya Raichik, the founder of the controversial social media account “Libs of TikTok,” which Lorenz accused of being linked to a series of threats against individuals featured on the account. during an interview, Lorenz stated there was a notable correlation between these incidents, but she later backtracked when Raichik pointed out that, after being doxxed by Lorenz, she received numerous death threats herself.

The article also highlights Lorenz’s apparent hypocrisy regarding online harassment. While she has publicly discussed her experience with online threats, she has also participated in actions that many view as doxing others. The piece further journeys into Lorenz’s defense of Luigi mangione, a man accused of murdering unitedhealthcare CEO Brian Thompson, whom she described as a “morally good person.” Her comments sparked outrage on social media, drawing responses from various commentators who criticized her for her perceived insensitivity towards the victim’s family. the article portrays Lorenz as someone who holds double standards regarding violence and harassment in the media landscape.


When Taylor Lorenz was with The Washington Post, a paper she’s now left to start her own Substack, she went after Libs of TikTok founder Chaya Raichik — whom she had doxed — for a report that claimed a link between “at least 33 instances” of threats against targets the social media account had covered.

It was “a pretty significant correlation,” Lorenz stated during an interview with Raichik. Raichik then noted that, after she was doxed by Lorenz, she “got tons of death threats this week after the entire media machine came after me. So are they responsible for those?”

No, Lorenz said during the February 2024 interview, telling her that she didn’t “think there’s, um, the same correlation.”

It’s worth noting, too, that Lorenz had gone on TV to cry about the horrors of online harassment … before doxing Raichik herself and leaving her to the wolves of the online horde, of course.

I bring these back up to note that Lorenz keeps two sets of ledgers when it comes to violent acts, something that came into sharp relief thanks to an interview that Lorenz gave CNN that aired Sunday in which she defended accused CEO murderer Luigi Mangione, 26, as a “morally good person.”

“It’s hilarious to see these millionaire media pundits on TV clutching their pearls about someone stanning a murderer when this is the United States of America — as if we don’t lionize criminals,” Lorenz told CNN’s Donie O’Sullivan about Mangione’s fanbase.

Mangione is accused of killing UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson, a husband and father, in New York City in December. But he’s cute and, you know, killers are entertainment, right?

That’s OK if you’re some unhinged Bluesky nut, but not if you’re an independent journalist with the WaPo, New York Times, and Business Insider on your résumé.

“It’s hilarious to see these millionaire media pundits on TV clutching their pearls about someone stanning a murderer when this is the United States of America — as if we don’t lionize criminals,” she said. “As if we don’t stan murderers of all sorts. We give them Netflix shows.”

“You’re gonna see women especially that feel like, ‘Oh my God, here’s this man who’s a revolutionary, who’s famous, who’s handsome, who’s young, who’s smart, he’s a person that seems like this morally good man,’ which is hard to find,” she added.

This, you may not be surprised to know, isn’t the first time that Lorenz has stanned for Mangione.

“I do believe in the sanctity of life, and I think that’s why I felt, along with so many other Americans, joy, unfortunately,” she said regarding Thompson’s killing on Piers Morgan’s show back in December.

Asked if she really was joyful “at a man’s execution,” she responded, “Maybe not joy, but certainly not empathy.”

Thus, I suppose if anyone’s going to not have credibility in calling Mangione a “morally good person,” it’s Lorenz — but CNN didn’t have to have her on to spread her bilious spew, yet here we are.

The reaction ranged from the Daily Wire’s Matt Walsh calling her a “[p]sychotic wench” to women’s sports activist Riley Gaines noting that Thompson’s wife and children might not agree with her on this:

And that’s the point: She can be as happy-clappy and glib about this at possible, but try doing that while looking Brian Thompson’s wife and children in the eyes. C’mon, Taylor. We’d love to see that. Don’t just speak your truth to some lightweight CNN bobblehead, speak it to the family of a murder victim.

If that seems unpalatable and ghastly, well, what do you think this was? But remember, it’s Libs of TikTok that’s really encouraging violence, not the woman defending Luigi Mangione fandom. If it weren’t for double standards, Taylor Lorenz would have no standards at all.




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