‘I knew that Phoenix Ikner … someone filled with hatred’: The woman’s post on the FSU shooter goes viral

Phoenix IknerThe suspected shooter, who on Thursday, gave a storm to Florida State University with his shooting race, killed two, not clearly a social recluse with his various social interactions. He was quoted in a news report on the students’ protest against President Donald Trump before the inauguration of January 20; His social media posts are far ahead for speculation about his political inclination that he was a supporter.
Now an X post of a woman has gone viral who claimed that when she was 16–17, Phoenix Ekner was claimed to know. They probably went to school together. “She is not an anti-Trumpar, Pro-Palistine, Pro-LGBTQ+, is someone who is filled with hatred, someone who is openly homophobic, racist, sexist, and a bully. If the IDC was Republican or Democratic, she was hating someone and she was hating a picture of a school and she was not even lying a lie. Was lived
‘Ikner did gums for Gums’
Ikner is a white domination, a conspiracy theorist who has expressed serious concerns among his classmates. A classmate from Talhasi State College, a former school in Ikner, recalled how he was asked to leave a “political roundate” club on his hatred speech.
Another classmate said that the icons were vocal in their federal politics class, promoting their upset ideas about black people, as well as the principles of far-flung conspiracy, such as former President Joe Biden was fraudulently elected. He was excluded from the political club due to his problematic views.
The half -son of a female policeman, Ikner claimed that he had guns, a classmate. “I remember that this man should not have access to firearms,” he told the USA Today.
Reid Cabold, a student of FSU, told CNN that he knew Ekner, which he faced in an additional political club a few years ago. Sebold said that the icner was asked to leave the group, which discussed the current events, which caused others to harass others.
“They constantly made people uncomfortable, where some people stopped coming. When we reached the braking point with Phoenix, and we asked them to leave,” Seybold told CNN.