Trans Nashville Shooter's Violent Anti-White Manifesto Leaked, Censored by Big Tech (See Images)
Pages from a manifesto believed to belong to the transgender Nashville school shooter, Audrey Hale, have been made public, revealing disturbing anti-white sentiments.
The transgender-identifying individual who perpetrated the attack on March 27, 2023, expressed deep-seated resentment towards white people in the leaked documents.
Steven Crowder, a prominent podcaster, released three pages of the shooter's diary on Monday.
The pages included vitriolic statements such as, “Kill those kids!!! Those crackers going to private fancy schools with those fancy khakis + sports backpacks w/ their daddies mustangs + convertables [sic],” and, “I wish to shoot you weakass d—ks w/ your mop yellow hair, wanna kill all you little crackers! Bunch of little f—gots w/ your white privileges.”
Crowder's team reportedly confirmed the authenticity of these images independently, a claim supported by The Daily Wire’s sources.
In addition to the racially charged language, the diary entries divulge the shooter's timeline for what they referred to as “death day,” starting at 7 a.m. with “get dressed” and concluding after 12:37 p.m. with “time 2 die.”
The shooter expressed a desire for a high casualty event: “I hope I have a high death count. Ready to die haha,” an entry dated the day of the attack.
The revelations have caused uproar, especially as the Metropolitan Police Department and the Tennessee Bureau of Investigations initially denied requests to release the manifesto, citing the ongoing nature of the investigation, despite the shooter being deceased.
The refusal to disclose the manifesto continued for months, with the Nashville Police Department facing accusations of withholding information and making contradictory excuses.
Adding to the complexity, a Nashville judge permitted parents of Covenant attendees to intervene in the lawsuit over the open records request.
Attorney Robb Harvey argued that the parents "are not crime victims under the law" and their concerns "are only speculative since they don't know what's contained in the records,” Daily Wire reports.
Amid these developments, Nashville’s Fox 17 confirmed through a source that the photos of the pages "are authentic."
This confirmation comes despite Facebook's intervention, where Steven Crowder’s attempts to post the manifesto were met with warnings that the content may go against their Community Standards on violence and incitement.
YouTube has reportedly taken down Crowder’s content, too.
The platform cited a violation of its policy on “violent criminal organizations” as the reason for the removal.
Crowder responded to YouTube's action by posting a screenshot of the notice from YouTube and stated, “Investigative journalism is now considered a ‘criminal organization.’”
YouTube reiterated its stance in a statement to Crowder, saying, “Content that glorifies violent criminal organizations or incites violence is not allowed on YouTube.”
Reddit has also reportedly restricted some of the leaked material.
The Mayor of Nashville, Freddie O’Connell, has expressed his concern and initiated an official inquiry into the unauthorized release of the documents.
"I have directed Wally Dietz, Metro’s Law Director, to initiate an investigation into how these images could have been released," O'Connell declared.
He emphasized the potential for "additional emotional trauma" and urged those affected to seek professional help, listing resources available for support.
The leaked pages from the manifesto, which detail the premeditation of the day's horrific events, raise questions about the motivation behind the shooting and the classification of the crime.
The use of derogatory language against the victims and the killer’s apparent racial animus spotlight a narrative that contradicts commonly held stereotypes about such shooters.