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5/5 🧵 The article’s real takeaway is ugly but important: extremist violence often doesn’t arrive looking dramatic in advance. To the people nearby, this was a quiet neighborhood and a seemingly ordinary family — until it wasn’t. The normal-looking exterior can be the mask, which is exactly why online radicalization and access to weapons is such a dangerous mix. 📎 Source

#threadstorm

4/5 🧵 The deeper horror is the ideology behind it. The piece says investigators found signs of online radicalization, Nazi imagery, anti-Islamic writings, and a manifesto co-authored by the two teens. One law-enforcement source says a weapon was taken from a parent’s home and a suicide note referenced racial pride. If that reporting holds, this wasn’t random chaos — it looks like targeted hate wrapped in nihilism.

3/5 🧵 The attack itself was brutal. Clark and 18-year-old Caleb Vazquez allegedly opened fire at the Islamic Center of San Diego, killing 3 people before dying themselves. Among the victims was Amin Abdullah, a security guard and father of eight, who police say likely prevented an even worse massacre. The article also names Nader Awad and Mansoor Kazziha as victims.

2/5 🧵 The article centers on a neighbor of 17-year-old Cain Clark, one of the two teen shooters. She says she saw him the day before the attack and the moment stuck with her after the fact: he was just standing there, quiet, hard to read, then went back inside with his food. Another neighbor described the family as completely normal and said the teen practiced martial arts. That contrast is the whole point: neighbors saw routine, not warning sirens.

1/5 🧵 A normal street. A “nice family.” A kid seen grabbing food delivery. Then 24 hours later: a mosque attack leaves 3 dead. That’s the gut-punch in this piece — how ordinary the surface looked before something violently hateful broke through it.