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fortran77 · 5 years ago
This describes me and most of the people I know. Why does the press treat "techies" like weirdos?

      “You never saw anyone come and go,” Schmoldt said of Warner’s home. “Never saw him go anywhere. As far as we knew, he was kind of a computer geek that worked at home.” 

     Warner had placed lights and security cameras outside his house. 

     Warner would do a lot of work in his yard, a tall antenna is placed prominently on the side of the house, Schmoldt said. Warner built the fence around his yard himself, the neighbor recalled. 

     The neighbors never talked about politics or religion. Warner never gave any indication of any closely held ideology.

LatteLazy · 5 years ago
I agree about it being anyone. Isn't that sort of the point though: everyone is weird. My dad is mad about football, so a similar report about him would list "never missing a game" and "often wearing his teams colours" and we'd all raise eyebrows.

You can get eyebrows raised about anyone by listing mundane but specific details I think is my point...

beezle · 5 years ago
It is troubling that any of that would be described as odd, especially in the age of Covid. Not everyone is a social butterfly and not everyone has large extended families. Even circles of friends tend to get smaller as one gets older.
threwawaysoff · 5 years ago
Well, consider the Simpsons' comic book guy: high-IQ but essentially unproductive. He represents that smart-weirdo stereotype.

In terms of envy and anti-intellectualism, it's convenient to lump most tech people, including productive ones, into the smart-weirdo stereotype.

Furthermore, someone is also a "weirdo" if they have a lifestyle that differs significantly from an acceptable "normal" range of allowed configurations.

sacks2k · 5 years ago
He was a loner tech type and had the exact kind of RV that exploded.

Do we know it was actually him? Or are the police just trying to get the case solved through some obvious/easy leads.

evan_ · 5 years ago
I don’t think they would have gone to his house or received a search warrant based solely on those two details.

They have the wreckage of RV, so they should have been able to find its VIN. That would have led to identifying the owner. It’s pretty likely at this point that it was the same RV regardless of whether the owner actually set the bomb.

notacoward · 5 years ago
> they should have been able to find its VIN

I don't think that's as certain as "should" suggests. Some vehicles have the VIN on the engine block or various highly recognizable part of the frame. Did this one? I don't know what's normal for an RV. If it was like a lot of vehicles and only had it on the front corner of the dash, it might be hard to find among that many pieces over that large an area. And that's not even counting the possibility that the perpetrator deliberately removed it.

foobarbazetc · 5 years ago
The FBI confirmed it was him and the remains at the site were his:

https://twitter.com/ap/status/1343320121180356608?s=21

new_guy · 5 years ago
Sounds like an easy way to frame someone, steal their vehicle, pack it with explosives and make sure you get caught on all the cameras.
evan_ · 5 years ago
That actually sounds pretty difficult to me.

Is your position here that the police should not visit the RV’s owner?

They haven’t said he’s a suspect it that he did anything and the initial tip that the police was investigating him came from a neighbor.

threwawaysoff · 5 years ago
Occam's razor. Inventing conspiracy theories isn't helpful.