Note: An attorney for the Club Q shooting suspect in an initial statement identified the shooter as non-binary and used they/them pronouns. However, in all subsequent statements and filings, the attorney now uses βhe/himβ pronouns.
There are a lot of bad parents out there. But I nominate Aaron Brink as the Worst Parent of 2022.
Brink is the father of the person who shot and killed five people and injured 20 more at Club Q in Colorado Springs. When interviewed by San Diegoβs CBS 8 in the aftermath of the shooting, he said his top concern was not for the people killed and injured, but for his child. Specifically, he expressed relief that his child is βnot gay.β
Brink told a CBS 8 reporter that for a long time he thought his child was dead because his ex-wife had told him that their child committed suicide and that he learned recently that wasnβt true.
Brink, a mixed martial arts fighter and former porn actor, goes on to say that he hasnβt seen his child in over a decade but received a call last year. The call didnβt go well and ended with Brink telling his child that he could βkick his ass.β
βIβm a black belt in jujitsu, heβs a no belt in jujitsu,β Brink says.
He then says he doesnβt know what his child has been accused of, all he knows is that it is βcrazy stuffβ related to a gay bar. βI donβt know what the heck he was doing in a gay bar,β Brink says. His voice is difficult to understand as he doesnβt enunciate, perhaps part of the βpermanent damageβ he says he has from former meth use and head trauma.
βWell, heβs accused of going on a mass shooting at a gay bar and killing five people,β the reporter informs him.
βWell shit,β Brink replies. βIβm just glad heβs not gay.β
Let that sink in. Not only is it a horrible thing to say, but it isnβt even necessarily true. I do not know the shooterβs sexual orientation, but itβs alarming to me that this father jumps to the conclusion that his child canβt be gay because his child went on a shooting spree at a gay bar rather than doing something truly horrific, like dancing or talking to a cute guy.
βIβm a Mormon. Iβm a conservative Republican, and we donβt do gay,β Brinks explains.
Brink says he wanted his child to follow in his footsteps.
βI wanted him to be a professional fighter like me,β he says. βI praised him for violent behavior really early. I told him it works. It is instant and youβll get immediate results.β
Everyone at Club Q that horrible night got to witness the βimmediate resultsβ of his childβs violence. Especially since a gun is much more effective than fists when killing is the goal.
When asked when his child might have first gotten interested in guns, Brink surmises, βAs soon as he had hair on his ass.β
βI showed him how to use these guns right here,β he says, putting up his fists. βI taught my son how to become a destructive weapon with his hands if he needs to.β
And yet, they didnβt use their fists as weapons. They used a fully automated long gun (multiple reporters have indicated it was an βAR-15 styleβ weapon). Because why risk using your fists when itβs so easy to get a gun in this country?
In this interview, Brink truly does grapple with the awful reality of what his child is accused of doing.
βThereβs no excuse for going and killing people. If youβre killing people thereβs something wrong,β he says. βI hope thereβs another suspect and this is not something my son actually did.β
There does not seem to be another suspect. Itβs pretty clear who did this.
Let me be clear: Addiction does not make you a bad parent. Cage fighting doesnβt make you a bad parent. Teaching your child that violence is the answer to their problems and wanting them to fight? Thatβs the issue. Brink seems to have been out of his childβs life for quite some time, but lessons learned before age 10, which is when Brink says he lost contact with his child, tend to stick with you.
βLife is so fragile and itβs valuable,β Brink says. For a man who has just essentially said that being gay is worse than killing gay people, he apparently has no sense of irony.



























Leave a Reply
View Comments