‘I knew Phoenix Ikner…someone filled with hatred’: Woman’s post on FSU shooter goes viral


'I knew Phoenix Ikner...someone filled with hatred': Woman's post on FSU shooter goes viral
FSU shooter suspect Phoenix Ikner was kicked out of a political club because of his problematic views.

Phoenix Ikner, the suspected shooter who stormed Florida State University on Thursday with his shooting spree, killing two, was not a social recluse as evident from his various social interactions. He was quoted in a news report on students’ protest against President Donald Trump ahead of his January 20 inauguration; his social media posts are plenty leading to speculations over his political leaning that he was a MAGA supporter.
Now an X post of a woman has gone viral who claimed to have known Phoenix Ikner when he was 16-17. They probably went to school together. “He’s not an anti-trumper, pro-palistine, pro-LGBTQ+, he is someone filled with hatred, someone who has been openly homophobic, racist, sexist, and a bully. Idc if he was republican or democratic he was someone hateful and that’s it,” the woman wrote and also posted a photo from a schoolbook to prove that she was not lying.

‘Ikner used to boast he had guns’

Ikner is a white supremacist, a conspiracy theorist which raised serious concerns among his classmates. One classmate from Ikner’s former school, Tallahassee State College, recalled how he was asked to leave a ā€œpolitical roundtableā€ club over his hate speech.
Another classmate said Ikner was vocal in their federal politics class, promoting his disturbing views about black people, as well as far-right conspiracy theories, such as that former President Joe Biden was fraudulently elected. He got kicked out of the political club because of his problematic views.
Step-son of a female cop, Ikner used to boast that he had guns, one classmate said. ā€œI remember thinking this man should not have access to firearms,ā€ he told USA Today.
Reid Seybold, an FSU student, told CNN he knew Ikner, whom he encountered in an extracurricular political club a few years ago. Seybold said Ikner was asked to leave the group, which discussed current events, due to behavior that unsettled others.
ā€œHe had continually made enough people uncomfortable where certain people had stopped coming. That’s kind of when we reached the breaking point with Phoenix, and we asked him to leave,ā€ Seybold told CNN.





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