In just 24 hours, the US has witnessed two mass killings, in which 29 people were killed, amid reports that the perpetrators of the two incidents and the mass killings of worshipers in Christchurch, New Zealand, killed 51 Muslims during Friday prayers on March 15 this year.

The US authorities announced on Monday that 20 people were killed and 26 others injured following a shooting massacre inside the Wal-Mart store in El Paso, Texas, near the border with Mexico. The FBI opened an investigation into the massacre As "domestic terrorism".

The United States did not wake up from the Texas incident until at least nine people were killed and the bomber was killed in a gun attack in Dayton, Ohio, in the northwest.

Local media said the second incident occurred outside a restaurant, hours after shooting at a Texas store.

Police said on Twitter that the shooter was killed, adding: "There are also 9 dead, and at least 16 people have been admitted to hospitals with injuries."

The main motive for the murder of Patrick Cricius, a 21-year-old white man from a suburb of Dallas, about 1,000 kilometers from the scene, is the hostility of Hispanic immigrants from Hispanic countries who make up 81% Of the 833,000 inhabitants of El Paso, according to a statement issued by him, in which two words were reported, one of which was the "Spanish invasion of Texas" and the second praise and admiration of those who attacked two mosques in Christchurch, New Zealand. On March 15, 51 worshipers were shot and wounded Dozens.

US President Donald Trump wrote in a tweet through his Twitter account that the shooting in El Paso was a "cowardly act." "I know that I stand with everyone in this country to condemn the hate crime," he said, adding: "There is no reason or excuse that can ever justify killing innocent people."

Krisius considered the executioner of the New Zealand mosques to be right. "They will take power from the local government and from the beloved Texas government to change its policy to suit their needs," he said in a statement on social media before the incident.

The link between the mass killings in America and New Zealand is based on conspiracy theory. The perpetrators believe there is a conspiracy to "replace" whites with colorful people through mass exodus, and accuse liberals, democrats, Muslims and Jews of being behind the alleged plot.

Based on this theory, its followers try to communicate and carry out mass killings around the world, and to attract believers in this theory from the extreme right, claiming to maintain the superiority of the "white element" or "white man" against those who call them "colored" of other ethnicities.

The book "Great Replacement" by the French author Reno Camus, published in 2011, which some consider as the beginning of a racist move against other ethnicities across Europe, the Americas and others, has contributed to this extreme trend. The book incites Muslims and immigrants, and considers the growth of the population " As a "genocide" of the "white population" in European countries, which is used by extremist groups, believing in the superiority of the "white man", an excuse to carry out violence and mass murder against other ethnicities and migrants.

On August 11, 2017, those who considered themselves white supremacists led a march on the campus of the University of Virginia in Charlottesville, Virginia, where protesters chanted "They will not replace us," or sometimes "Jews will not replace us" Conspiracy theory.

The goal of the march was to be a moment to come for the increasingly "white America" ​​movement. On the second day, the "neo-Nazis" drove a car to a crowd of anti-racist demonstrators, killing one.

Conspiracy theory continued to gain more extremists who believed in "white" superiority. The Christchurch shooter referred to the "substitution" in his address before he killed 51 worshipers and broadcast it directly to Facebook for propaganda.