(ThyBlackMan.com) “Shots Fired at Correspondents’ Dinner” dominated TV headlines following the gun attack at the Washington Hilton. Correction: Shots were not fired at the dinner but in the corridor outside. That’s where security had pinned the accused gunman, Cole Tomas Allen, on his stomach and handcuffed.
Some journalists like to overdramatize everything, especially concerning themselves. Sure, the alleged attacker released a manifesto saying he wanted to take down Trump and members of his administration. But even if the suspect had made it inside, he probably wouldn’t have gotten past the guy in back, seen unperturbed and eating his burrata salad.

The most dangerous place that night was inside the assailant’s head. That hasn’t slowed the predictable banter about today’s toxic political environment and how anger at Trump and company apparently set off a would-be assassin. It was more likely only the trigger connected to the explosive device wired in his head.
“This is a person who attended one of the most prestigious stem universities in the country, in technology, Caltech. Got an engineering undergrad degree, got a master’s in computer science,” one commentator said in a surprised voice. “He was working as a part time teacher, but he described himself as a game developer.”
Let us disregard the assumption that academically or professionally successful people have their heads screwed on straight. Someone who talks eloquently in full sentences is not always more mentally coherent than the drug-addled street person hollering insanities at passersby.
Some of the worst killers had what our society generally considers the “best minds.”
The Unabomber, Ted Kaczynski, entered Harvard at 16, earned a doctorate in math and taught at the University of California, Berkley. He later moved to a remote cabin in Montana from which he ran an 18-year bombing campaign that killed three people and injured more than 20. His preferred targets were universities and airlines.
Amy Bishop was a Harvard-trained neuroscientist who taught at the University of Alabama in Huntsville. When denied tenure, she shot three colleagues at a faculty meeting, killing three. At age 21, she shot her brother dead, an action then ruled as accidental. Would someone never enrolled at Harvard have been let off the hook so easily?
Michael Laudor entered Yale as an undergrad and cruised through its law school. He quickly landed a perch at the highly selective Bain & Company consulting group. But Laudor’s long struggle with serious mental illness developed into schizophrenia. He eventually knifed his girlfriend to death thinking that she was a robot or a doll out to kill him. Laudor’s friend, Jonathan Rosen, tells the story in his book, “The Best Minds.” Rosen condemns the 1960s-era push to close mental hospitals and end most involuntary confinement on the belief that even severe psychiatric illness would be managed through outpatient care.
At night, the Gilgo Beach serial killer stalked young women, strangling eight and dismembering bodies. By day, Rex Heuermann sat in his Manhattan office advising architects and builders on their projects.
Like Kaczynski, whose manifesto claimed that his violence would save humankind from unfettered technology, Allen’s screed pompously wallows in self-importance with florid apologies and thank-yous. He boasts, “I walk in with multiple weapons and not a single person there considers the possibility that I could be a threat.” And he threatens any participants standing in his way. After all, he adds, most of them “chose to attend a speech by a pedophile, rapists, and traitor, and are thus complicit.”
Fortunately, the alleged shooter’s efforts led to no deaths, his own included. If they served any purpose, it was not to replace the current leadership. It served as a reminder of America’s mental-health crisis and how hard it will be to confront honestly.
Written by Froma Harrop
Official website; https://twitter.com/FromaHarrop














Pelvo, I hear you trying to break it down from a bigger, systemic angle, and I respect that. But I think you giving this man a little too much strategy and not enough accountability. Not everything has to be a grand calculated disruption plan. Sometimes it’s just a man who made a dangerous decision and showed up ready to cause harm, even if he wasn’t fully prepared to pull it off clean.
You right that systems shape people, no doubt. But at some point, the individual still has to own what they chose to do. Carrying weapons into a high-security event ain’t theory, that’s action. Whether he was skilled or not don’t really change the intent behind showing up like that.
And comparing him to men like Einstein or Oppenheimer feels off to me. Those were men dealing with consequences after creating something. This is a man making a choice in real time to step into chaos. That’s a different lane altogether.
Was Albert Einstein mentally ill ? Was J. Robert Oppenheimer mentally ill ? Was Wernher Von Braun mentally ill ? The pathway to African American existentialism or freedom in this world is the mastery of empirical scientific high-tech ideas, and inventions.
Pelvo, I feel where you coming from, for real. We do need more of our people in science, tech, building things, owning ideas… no argument there. But this situation ain’t about knocking intelligence or education. It’s about the fact that being smart don’t automatically mean somebody is stable or grounded.
You can have degrees, good job, all that. and still be dealing with something internally that ain’t right… We gotta be able to push excellence and still keep it real about mental health and personal accountability. Both things gotta exist at the same time.
To: Republican Jason; Thank you for your thoughts on my comments dated April 29, 2026 At 9:58PM., relative to the actions of Cole Tomas Allen. Being ” stable and grounded ” in America, which is a pluralistic democracy with a capitalist economic base that believes in an unequal distribution of available goods and services based on merit. Merit is defined as usefulness to the Republic. Our political,economic, legal, and social systems are needlessly too confining to many of our citizenry who are, through the efforts of empirical science practiced in institutions of higher learning, systematically taught differing lessons about our present reality that are inconsistent with the previous findings of days past. Our perceptions of reality have changed and so have our ” mental health, and personal accountability”. I am reasonably certain that Einstein, Oppenheimer, and Von Braun, all had second thoughts about their inventions’ devastating effects on humanity through the use of an atomic, and nuclear bombs. Allen’s intent to kill the President are not obvious evidenced by the unreasonable amount of weapons, and ammunition he was carrying on his person, and his lack of skill in using these weapons. Where was he trained to fight his way through rooms filled with armed security forces, and other men, and women who could probably could have over-powered him physically ? How much ” ammo ” was he carrying ? I think that Allen was deliberately under-armed with conventional weaponry to attempt an assassination of our President. Allen’s work that night was a cold, calculated attempt at “disruption of an event” not an assassination of the President and, or others.