How the Pelosi Attack Suspect Plunged Into Online Hatred
SAN FRANCISCO Bitter over the end of a long relationship, estranged from his children and working carpentry jobs to keep a roof over his head after a time living on the streets, David DePape retreated into isolation, spending hours each day in the online worlds of gaming and chat rooms.
DePape, the suspect in the brutal attack on Speaker Nancy Pelosis husband, had an obsession with video games as a boy, and at some point in his adult life it appeared to metastasize into something darker. According to his blog posts, the online harassment campaign known as Gamergate, which began in 2014 as a backlash against female critics of the gaming industry and included misogynistic attacks and death threats, became a catalyst of his growing interest in right-wing conspiracy theories and the many rants against women that he posted on his blog.
How did I get into all this, he wrote in one passage. Gamer Gate it was gamer gate. He described Gamergate as a consumer led revolt against communism and railed against wokism and feminism complaints that appeared to be precursors to his later embrace of the most virulent and bigoted of online conspiracy theories. It all came in an era in which such theories have spread among wider groups of Americans and have been promoted by far-right leaders.
DePape, 42, sits in a San Francisco jail cell, accused of busting into the Pelosi residence in the early hours of Oct. 28 and bludgeoning the speakers 82-year-old husband, Paul Pelosi, with a hammer. The attack last month left Pelosi unconscious and lying in a pool of his own blood. But the real target, prosecutors say, was Nancy Pelosi, who was in Washington at the time.
https://www.yahoo.com/news/pelosi-attack-suspect-plunged-online-154508079.html
So he's a gamer bro.