By Ryan “Dickie” Thompson – Disruptarian.com


What the Media Isn’t Talking About

So now we learn that Nicholas Roske, the man who showed up armed outside Justice Brett Kavanaugh’s house in 2022, has “come out” as a trans woman named Sophie. Court filings from September 19, 2025, reveal that Roske’s defense team now refers to him with female pronouns. The sentencing is set for October 3, and prosecutors are asking for at least 30 years.

Roske, or “Sophie,” had planned to kill a sitting Supreme Court Justice because he didn’t like the way Roe v. Wade might go. He had a handgun, a knife, zip ties, and burglary tools. He called 911 on himself before carrying out the attack, which is the only reason Brett Kavanaugh is alive today.

And now? We’re told to respect the pronouns of a would-be assassin.


Trans Identity as a Shield

Here’s the pattern: every time a high-profile criminal “comes out” as trans, the focus shifts. The crime becomes secondary. The narrative becomes about pronouns, discrimination, or prison conditions. Suddenly, we’re told the system must bend over backward to accommodate the criminal.

In Roske’s case, the defense is already using this angle. They want lighter sentencing because of “conditions in prison for transgender inmates.” Translation: play the victim card.

But let’s not lose the thread. This was an assassination attempt against a Supreme Court Justice, carried out in a climate where left-wing activists were already protesting outside justices’ homes and politicians were winking at the mobs. If the political winds had been blowing the other way, we’d never hear the end of it.


A Trend We Can’t Ignore

This isn’t an isolated story.

  • Nashville School Shooter (2023): Audrey Hale, a biological female who identified as male, carried out a massacre at Covenant School, killing six, including three children. The media quickly shifted to worrying about “anti-trans backlash.”
  • Aberdeen, Maryland Shooting (2018): Snochia Moseley, a transgender individual, shot and killed three co-workers before turning the gun on herself. Coverage was muted.
  • Denver STEM School Shooting (2019): One of the shooters, Maya “Alec” McKinney, identified as transgender. Again, the reporting bent over backwards to frame the identity angle sympathetically.

Notice a pattern? Each time, the violence gets brushed aside while activists rush to make sure “misgendering” doesn’t happen. The dead, the injured, the nearly assassinated—those are afterthoughts.


Why This Matters

Let’s get one thing straight: I don’t care what clothes you wear or what name you go by. That’s your choice. But when identity politics becomes a shield for violence, we’ve crossed into dangerous territory.

Imagine if a Christian conservative tried to assassinate a Supreme Court Justice. Imagine if a guy in a MAGA hat shot up a school. Would the media spend their time on pronouns? Or would they hammer home the ideology behind the act, demanding that anyone remotely connected be investigated?

We all know the answer.


The Cultural Gaslighting

You know what? The whole debate around “trans violence” is a lesson in selective outrage. When violence fits the narrative (like Charlottesville), it gets amplified to the heavens. When it doesn’t, it gets buried under layers of identity spin.

It’s like the Fed playing Monopoly with real lives, but this time the currency is outrage. They print it up when it suits them, and they tighten the supply when it doesn’t.

And here’s the dangerous part: if we can’t talk honestly about who commits violence and why, then we can’t solve anything. Pretending doesn’t make people safer. It makes us all targets.


The Political Angle

Roske’s case wasn’t just random. He told investigators he was furious about Roe v. Wade and about mass shootings like Uvalde. That anger turned into a plan to murder a sitting Justice.

Now add in the fact that politicians and activists openly encouraged intimidation of the Court after the Dobbs leak in 2022. The White House press secretary at the time even dodged questions about whether protesting outside justices’ homes was appropriate.

So ask yourself: what happens when political leaders wink at mobs, the media spins identity as a shield, and unstable individuals like Roske are egged on by the rhetoric? We get exactly this. Violence, rebranded as victimhood.


The Human Cost

Here’s what we’re not supposed to talk about:

  • Brett Kavanaugh’s children had to live with the knowledge that a man came to their doorstep with a gun.
  • Families in Nashville will never see their kids again because a trans shooter decided to turn rage into murder.
  • Co-workers in Aberdeen lost their lives in a shooting that the media quickly swept aside.

Real people suffer while activists fight over pronouns.


Where Do We Go From Here?

The answer isn’t complicated, but it’s also not politically correct:

  • Stop excusing violence because of identity. A murderer is a murderer, no matter their pronouns.
  • Hold the media accountable when they bury stories or spin them into “representation” issues.
  • Recognize that ideological violence—whether left or right—should be condemned without qualifiers.

And most importantly: stop training people to see themselves as victims first and responsible adults second. Handouts, excuses, and identity politics only fuel the cycle. It’s like feeding bears at a campsite. It feels compassionate in the moment, but it creates a long-term danger for everyone.


Final Word

Nicholas Roske didn’t just try to kill Brett Kavanaugh. He tried to kill the rule of law. And no amount of name changes or pronouns changes that fact.

If we want a society where freedom and responsibility matter, then we need to stop pretending violence can be washed away by identity politics. Otherwise, we’ll keep getting more “Sophie Roskes,” more “Audrey Hales,” and more innocent lives cut short.


Sources

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Spun Web Technology SMART SEO

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