A 104-page hate-filled manifesto behind the Montreal shooting shows what happens when a godless, Marxist, anti-family culture festers online and explodes in real life.
Story Snapshot
- The Montreal shooter’s manifesto mixes incel-style hatred of women, communist praise, and antisemitic conspiracy language.
- Media and officials highlight “incel” and mental health while downplaying Marxism, antisemitism, and spiritual emptiness.
- The document openly calls for violent revolution and ends with “KILL THEM ALL,” targeting women, bankers, and porn executives.
- Experts admit this kind of hybrid extremism is growing online as young men lose faith, family, and purpose.
What The Montreal Manifesto Really Says
Reports say the Montreal gunman left a 104-page manifesto that reads like a roadmap of a soul that has cut itself off from God, family, and basic respect for human life.[4] The text attacks women again and again, talks about “ordinary men” being rejected, and blames a so-called “hypergamy state” where women chase a few “brutes” while most men are left behind.[4] He links his personal loneliness to a call for violent revolution to tear down modern capitalist society.[4]
Media summaries say the document rages against pornography sites, elite bankers, billionaire chief executives, and politicians, accusing them of helping create a “hypergamous hellscape” for young men.[1] At the same time, the writer praises communist systems and repeats the old Marxist idea that capitalism only exists to let a rich “bourgeois” class extract value from everyone else.[1] This is not simple sadness or confusion; it is a worked-out attempt to justify violence in the name of envy and revenge.[5]
A Toxic Mix: Incel Grievances, Marxism, And Antisemitism
Global and European outlets say experts see clear links to the “involuntary celibate” or incel movement, even though the shooter never uses that word.[5] Instead, he talks about “involuntary loneliness,” being “deprived of intimacy,” and deep jealousy toward both women and more successful men, which matches known incel themes.[1] Research on incel attacks shows loneliness, sexual frustration, and revenge seeking show up again and again in their writings, even when they do not use the label.[7]
Conservative reporters who have reviewed the full manifesto add another layer most big outlets barely touch: open antisemitic language and far-left ideology.[1] One detailed report describes the author talking about “many Jews” in the Western ruling class and calling them a “Judaeo-bourgeois class,” while blaming “Zionist Jews” for shaping capitalism and global power.[1] At the same time, he praises communism, quotes Marxist ideas, and blasts free‑market conservatives for helping a rich elite while “common men” suffer.[1]
“Be Steadfast… KILL THEM ALL”: From Online Hate To Real Violence
Multiple accounts agree the manifesto does not just complain; it pushes action. The writer talks about using terror to build a “new order,” and calls for violent revolution against what he sees as a “hypergamy state.”[4] One widely quoted passage at the end urges readers to “Be steadfast, move forward, and KILL THEM ALL,” drawing a clear line between “ordinary men” and hated “brutes.”[4] This is a direct call to mass murder, not a vague rant.
Experts on radicalization say this kind of “ideological hybridity” is now common in lone-wolf attacks.[7] Instead of one clear movement, these men blend misogyny, anti-capitalist rage, conspiracies about Jews and elites, and a celebration of violence.[7] Many are heavy users of online spaces that tell them they will never find love, never build a family, and should “take some people with them” when they go.[6] When a culture strips faith, marriage, and real community from young men, these dark echo chambers rush in to fill the void.
How Authorities And Media Are Framing The Attack
Canadian media say police and security officials admit there is a manifesto and that it is under review, but they are cautious about naming a single motive.[2] A former Ottawa police chief warned it is too early to say the attack was driven mainly by incel ideology because the document attacks so many groups at once, from Zionists to health insurance executives and pickup artists.[2] The Royal Canadian Mounted Police confirmed the manifesto exists but has not released it, leaving the public to rely on leaks and partial quotes.[2]
Who is Seth Hatfield? What we know about the 25-year-old Montreal shooting suspecthttps://t.co/fBvVoyw16R
— Edmonton Sun (@Edmontonsun) June 24, 2026
At the same time, major outlets and academics are using the case to push more talk about “online harms” and new controls on social media.[2] They blame platform algorithms for grooming boys into toxic spaces and say new online harms laws are needed, even as they admit such rules will not fix the deeper problem.[2] Research on incels shows that many in these communities are not terrorists in a strict sense, but that a fraction do endorse mass violence to get attention, seek revenge, and force social change.[13] That mix of grievance and ideology is exactly what this Montreal manifesto appears to show.
Sources:
[1] Web – Montreal shooter manifesto reveals why our civilization is doomed …
[2] Web – Montreal shooter’s ‘anti-women’ manifesto reflects growing warnings
[4] X – New alleged details from Montreal shooting attacker’s manifesto …
[5] Web – page-long manifesto attacking women, and subscribed to the incel …
[6] Web – Montreal gunman’s manifesto reveals antisemitic, far-left ideology
[7] YouTube – Montreal shooting suspect manifesto aligns with incel …
[13] Web – Montréal gunman leaves behind manifesto inspired by the ‘incel …
