The May 2026 attack on the Islamic Center of San Diego reflects an emerging trend in neo-Nazi accelerationist violence. While extremist ideology remains central to this form of violence, the pathways into it are becoming increasingly diffuse and embedded in nihilistic online subcultures. This Dispatch situates the attack within the broader landscape of contemporary neo-Nazi accelerationism and outlines implications for policymakers and practitioners. It argues that this shooting reflects a fragmented threat environment in which white supremacist ideology increasingly intersects with misanthropy, parasocial fandoms and nihilistic online environments. Key Findings The San Diego mosque shooting was an ideologically motivated act of neo-Nazi accelerationist violence, but the attackers’ pathways into that violence were more diffuse than their target selection and manifestos alone indicate. While white supremacy was their primary motivator, their broader online footprints also reflected influences from nihilistic online subcultures. The attack is indicative of a broader pattern in which ideological extremism increasingly intersects with nihilistic violent subcultures. Across a growing number of cases, perpetrators have blended ideological elements with less linear online pathways influenced by mass shooter fixations, misogynistic grievances, obscure fandoms and/or transgressive online aesthetics. The case highlights an emerging fracture within the accelerationist landscape. While younger actors outside legacy accelerationist networks continue to borrow from traditional white supremacist ideology and attacker mythology, established networks often dismiss them as unserious, undisciplined, or ideologically confused. This dynamic suggests that accelerationist violence is becoming more fragmented and less subject to control by legacy extremist communities. (…) The San Diego attackers carried out a recognizable form of neo-Nazi accelerationist violence, but their online trajectories point to more diffuse and hybridized pathways into it. Importantly, these influences do not displace or lessen the ideology that fueled the attack, but instead help clarify how the perpetrators arrived at it. ISD’s post-attack analysis identified an extensive online footprint associated with both shooters, hereafter referred to as Shooter A and Shooter B for clarity and to avoid undue publicity. Both shooters engaged with the True Crime Community (TCC), a broad online fandom rooted in an obsessive interest in mass killers. At its most extreme edge, TCC participants glorify these killers, with some conducting their own attacks as an expression of their grievances and/or to establish a legacy within these fandoms. The San Diego attackers’ manifestos reflected this influence by listing several non-ideologically motivated mass killers as their inspirations, including the perpetrators of the 2012 Sandy Hook shooting, the 2007 Virginia Tech shooting and the 2007 mass killing in Jokela, Finland. However, their broader online activity suggests a stronger degree of engagement with the TCC than the manifestos alone indicate. Images 1 and 2: Left: Image of Shooter A wearing a shirt referencing an ‘incelcore’ artist that promotes mass violence; Right: Image posted on Shooter B’s Pinterest account (since deleted) referencing clothes associated with the Columbine massacre Also of note, Shooter A demonstrated significant engagement with the incel subculture. They devoted a section of their manifesto to the topic, using dehumanizing slurs to describe women, praising incel and misogynistic killers such as the 2014 Isla Vista shooter and the 1989 École Polytechnique mass murderer and leaving behind a post history on a prominent incel forum. The shooter also expressed grievances related to ‘hypergamy’, a term adapted within incel communities to claim that women are predisposed to pursuing only the best-looking men, which the attacker framed as evidence that all women are evil. While Shooter B’s online footprint did not reveal as much engagement with the incel subculture, they similarly praised the Isla Vista and École Polytechnique attackers and dedicated a section of their manifesto to decrying feminism and hypergamy. While misogyny is often prevalent in extremist movements—functioning as a risk factor, ideological framework, or legitimizing narrative for violence—the shooters appeared to have been more deeply engaged with explicitly misogynistic online subcultures than is typically the case with Christchurch-inspired accelerationist attackers
via isd: San Diego mosque shooting highlights new generation of neo-Nazi accelerationism