The reporting from Israel says nothing about the driver, just that she suddenly veered into a building and killed a man.
Initially suspected as terror attack but determined to be accident – Tesla driver lost control Thursday morning of her vehicle and crashed into the Nono & Mimi cafe in Kfar Saba. Consequently, a 35-year-old man lost his life. Another person sustained light injuries.
An eyewitness stated, “There was tremendous panic. Everyone assumed it was terror attack. Very rapidly it became apparent that this involved accident, with driver who lost control and swerved into the café.”
The story calls it both very bizarre, and yet, also a normal car accident.
Politico has a detailed investigation of the “Young Republicans” in America, based on leaked chat messages like these.
Source: Politico. Texts and reactions by: Peter Giunta, Bobby Walker, Anne KayKaty, Joe Maligno, Rachel Hope, Alex Dwyer.
Current reporting of a secret Republican platform (e.g. “invisible empire”) sounds very familiar to me, as a disinformation historian.
They referred to Black people as monkeys and “the watermelon people” and mused about putting their political opponents in gas chambers. They talked about raping their enemies and driving them to suicide and lauded Republicans who they believed support slavery.
How familiar? I present the canonical Ronald Reagan example.
History rhymes even when it doesn’t repeat.
The Young Republicans knew exactly what they were doing:
“If we ever had a leak of this chat we would be cooked fr fr” heart emoji
They understood the content was genuinely extreme, not actually funny.
The “joke” framing was explicitly strategic cover using information warfare tactics, camouflage.
The dangerous tell:
When something appears over 251 times in chats, with specific known violent hate symbols (1488), and includes detailed policy discussions interwoven with the “jokes,” it stops being humor and becomes domestic terrorist ideology with a thin comedic veneer.
Source: Twitter
The jester’s protection only works when everyone knows it’s performance. What happens when the jester starts believing their own act, and then acting on their beliefs?
Giunta wrote “everyone that votes no is going to the gas chamber” while actually running a political campaign. That means he made an articulated threat wrapped in historical genocide imagery, for use as an organizing tool.
When the second-highest elected official provides cover for “I love Hitler” and gas chamber jokes by labeling it all as mere “college” banter, the performance has become a policy position. The trajectory has obvious historical precedents.
Vance specifically characterized universities as dangerous places that “indoctrinate students” with “political orthodoxy” and said they peddle “deceit and lies.” Vance quoted Richard Nixon’s line “The professors are the enemy” approvingly, stating there was “wisdom” in Nixon’s words.
Yet when Young Republican leaders – including government officials and state legislators – express explicit support for Hitler and make threats about gas chambers, Vance suddenly claims everyone should dismiss it because it is… wait for it… normal “college group chat”.
Apparently to the Vice President, discussing any opposition to Nazism on campus constitutes to him dangerous indoctrination worthy of “aggressive attack,” while those expressing extreme support for Hitler and threatening political opponents with execution by gas chamber are engaged in harmless college “humor.”
What’s the historical outcome when leadership actively protects, rather than condemns, organized imminent extremist violence in discourse?
Weimar Germany (1920s-30s): Leadership initially dismissed Nazi rhetoric as fringe or protected it as “free speech”, enabling genocide
Rwanda (early 1990s): Radio stations normalized dehumanizing language; political leadership either participated or stayed silent, enabling genocide
Former Yugoslavia (1980s-90s): Nationalist leaders used historical grievances and ethnic dehumanization in “joking” contexts before committing genocide
American courts have long recognized that speech itself can constitute actionable harm when it incites imminent lawless action (Brandenburg v. Ohio), communicates true threats (Virginia v. Black), or inflicts injury by its very utterance (Chaplinsky v. New Hampshire).
The Young Republicans’ messages are explicit threats against specific political targets, combined with organizing capacity and historical genocide imagery.
According to the Palm Beach County Sheriff’s Office, Paris Huggins, 19, was driving a Tesla southbound at the 13000 block of U.S. 27 at around 5 p.m. Monday when she veered off the roadway for an undetermined reason.
We can see already however that it has the hallmarks of Autopilot: veered suddenly into a pole.
According to the Palm Beach County Sheriff’s Office Traffic Division, the victim, identified as Paris Huggins, was traveling southbound when, for reasons still under investigation, her 2025 Tesla left the roadway and struck a concrete utility pole. The vehicle spun violently, rolling multiple times before colliding with a wooden pole and catching fire.
a blog about the poetry of information security, since 1995