The media has an odd term for the sullen young women who have made a sexual fetish of pretty-boy killer Luigi Mangione.
They’re called Luigi Fangirls.
It evokes a frolic, young women skipping down the street, singing, holding hands. You know, “Girls Just Wanna Have Fun.”
But I much prefer another name, a more direct name:
Witches.
I’m told that witches are supposedly fictional, a phobia created by men, by the patriarchy, to impose our evil will upon women who cling to stories like “The Handmaid’s Tale,” to justify generations of their cruelties upon boys, from wholesale abortion to “gender affirming” castrations of transgenders.
But they began to appear in our lives, as they had appeared in the past, when they publicly poured out their hysterical sexual fantasies and pathetic love for their heartthrob with those Italian eyebrows, the killer Luigi Mangione, the rich boy of privilege who stalked then shot Health Care executive Bryan Thompson in the back.
Sick Luigi Mangione fangirls say murdered CEO Brian Thompson’s children are ‘better off without him’ https://t.co/BBCGENhG9I pic.twitter.com/GyxXKdOORL
— New York Post (@nypost) May 18, 2026
Mangione is the pretty privileged boy who murdered Brian Thompson, the CEO of United Health Care. Thompson was fatally shot outside a Midtown Manhattan hotel in December 2024. Mangione, who was apprehended days later in Pennsylvania, is currently facing both federal and state murder and weapons charges.
But what explains the hysteria of the witches?
If this Post Millennial article is true, then I think we can ascertain the anger of one of them: Luigi Mangione fangirl who celebrated murder of Brian Thompson is the daughter of CVS Health exec: report.
One of the fangirl “journalists” who has publicly supported Luigi Mangione is reportedly the daughter of a senior healthcare executive at CVS Health.
Lena Weissbrot is the daughter of Reina Natero, a longtime pharmaceutical industry executive who oversees prescription drug insurance coverage rules at CVS Health. Natero has worked in the industry for more than two decades.
Weissbrot is one of three supporters of Mangione who are referred to online as “Mangionistas.” They recently gained attention during Mangione’s pre-trial hearings after receiving New York City press credentials.
Weissbrot has publicly expressed support for Mangione for the alleged murder of United Healthcare CEO Brian Thompson. On Monday, outside the New York State Supreme Court, Weissbrot said Thompson’s children were “better off without him.”
According to the New York Post, Weissbrot received a Fulbright-MTV fellowship in 2015 after graduating with a Bachelor of Fine Arts from Florida State University. The grant allowed her to study “South African artists identifying as feminists who use Hip-hop music as a form of activism” at Rhodes University in South Africa.
“This has become an archetype at this point, when activists become defined as the ‘anti’ of what their parents were,” Stu Smith, analyst at the Manhattan Institute, told The Post. “There’s no self-awareness.”
Patricide is a theme that runs throughout Easy Riders, Raging Bulls, Peter Biskend’s retrospective on the “New Hollywood” of the 1960s and ’70s. But with women becoming high-powered executives in the decades since, there’s no reason to be sexist about young distaff lefties hating their mothers as well.