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‘All You Had to Do Was Pay Us Enough to Live,’ Said Alleged California Warehouse Arsonist

  • Writer: The Left Chapter
    The Left Chapter
  • Apr 12
  • 2 min read

“Expect to see more of this as people struggle to survive under our decaying capitalist system,” warned one observer.

Images of the fire via news video screenshot


By Brett Wilkins, Common Dreams


The 29-year-old employee accused of burning down a paper products warehouse in southern California was allegedly furious over pay and working conditions at the facility and compared himself Luigi Mangione, the anti-capitalist folk hero to many Americans who allegedly assassinated a health insurance CEO.


Chamel Abdulkarim is facing federal and state felony charges in connection with a blaze that tore through the 1.2 million square-foot Kimberly-Clark warehouse in Ontario, San Bernardino County, shortly after 12:30 am on Tuesday. The Los Angeles Times reported that 20 other people were working in the facility, which is roughly the size of 11 city blocks, at the time. There are no reports of any injuries.


According to the US Department of Justice (DOJ), Abdulkarim uploaded videos to Facebook showing him setting fires in the warehouse and saying, “If you’re not going to pay us enough to fucking live or afford to live, at least pay us enough not to do this shit.”


Abdulkarim allegedly said in texts and phone calls that he cost Kimberly-Clark “billions,” adding, “All you had to do was pay us enough to live.”



The DOJ said the blaze caused “approximately $500 million in damage.”


Prosecutors said that after starting the fires, Abdulkarim called a friend and said that “a lot of people are going to understand” what he did, just like when “Luigi popped that mutherfucker,” a reference to Mangione’s alleged murder of UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson in New York in 2024.


Shareholders of Kimberly-Clark—which makes products including Kleenex tissues, Scott and Cottonelle toilet paper, Huggies diapers, and Kotex feminine care products—enjoyed profits topping $2.0 billion last year. Company chairman and CEO Michael Hsu made about $15.3 million in compensation. That’s more than 300 times as much as the average Kimberly-Clark employee earned, according to the AFL-CIO.


Critics of capitalism have long argued that the yawning chasm between rich and poor in the United States is a recipe for disaster that could far exceed individual acts of resistance, if the crisis is not soon addressed. However, under President Donald Trump and the Republican-controlled Congress, wealth inequality continues to increase at what many experts argue is an unsustainable rate.


Many leftists took to social media to praise the blaze, with some, like the Rev. Oliver Dean Snow of Mothman Ministries, comparing the arson attack to historical acts of radical resistance like the 1884 New Straitsville Mine Fire, in which striking union miners in Ohio pushed burning coal cars deep into a mine, causing an underground inferno that not only permanently shut down operations, but is believed to still be burning to this day, 141 years later.



“Expect to see more of this as people struggle to survive under our decaying capitalist system,” said one popular socialist account on X.


Brett Wilkins is a staff writer for Common Dreams.


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