Charlie Kirk, the conservative activist and founding father of Turning Level USA, was fatally shot in broad daylight whereas talking at Utah Valley College on Sept. 10. A sniper fired from a close-by rooftop, and although Kirk was rushed to the hospital, he didn’t survive.
Homicide is improper. At all times. No ideology, no political disagreement, no private offense can justify extinguishing a human life. College students and workers who witnessed the chaos will carry that trauma ceaselessly. Kirk’s spouse and two younger youngsters should reside with a grief no household ought to bear. Assassination is barbaric and indefensible.
But when we cease there, we miss the deeper reality.
Kirk’s Document
Charlie Kirk was no martyr for freedom. He was a provocateur whose rhetoric leaned closely on racist falsehoods. He dismissed range, fairness, and inclusion applications as “anti-white.” He claimed white privilege was a “fantasy.” He denounced the Civil Rights Act of 1964 as a “enormous mistake.” He even reversed his reward of Martin Luther King Jr., later calling him “terrible” and a “mythological anti-racist creation.”
Kirk additionally promoted the so-called “Nice Substitute” idea — the white nationalist concept that demographic change in America is an intentional plot to scale back White affect. “The ‘Nice Substitute’ shouldn’t be a idea, it’s a actuality,” he declared. These phrases emboldened prejudice, unfold division, and threatened the dignity of thousands and thousands of People.
Kirk’s ideology was harmful and rooted in racism. His assassination doesn’t erase that reality. Violence doesn’t finish hate; it deepens it, handing extremists a martyr.
A Tradition of Contempt
Why does violence preserve erupting in America? Take a look at the tone set from the very prime. The sitting president has turned ridicule right into a political weapon. He described migrants as “poisoning the blood of the nation,” steered violent conduct is of their “unhealthy genes,” and solid immigrants as an invading military.
This isn’t coverage — it’s poison. And it doesn’t cease with immigrants. Take my hometown of Baltimore. The president branded town “disgusting” and “rat and rodent infested,” insisting “no human being would need to reside there.” He even threatened to ship within the Nationwide Guard, as if Baltimore was enemy territory. These phrases weren’t aimed toward buildings; they have been aimed toward individuals — households, communities, and a proud majority-Black metropolis lowered to a nationwide punchline.
Baltimore shouldn’t be distinctive. The identical contempt exhibits up in assaults on girls, journalists, political opponents, and anybody who dares to problem his narrative. When cruelty turns into a governing model, it indicators to the nation that contempt is power and that opponents are enemies to be destroyed. He didn’t hearth the bullet that killed Charlie Kirk. However the local weather he nurtured made it simpler for another person to cross that line.
The Drawback With Reward
Much more troubling was his response after Kirk’s demise. He known as him a “nice man,” “legendary,” and a “martyr for reality and freedom.” He even ordered flags flown at half-staff.
That reward is a part of the issue. When leaders glorify somebody who vilified immigrants, denied systemic racism, and undermined civil rights, they normalize extremism. They ship the message that tearing others down shouldn’t be solely acceptable however honorable. It’s doublespeak — condemning violence in a single breath whereas sanctifying the concepts that assist gas it within the subsequent.
A Name to Conscience
From the slave patrols of the 1800s to Reconstruction massacres, Wilmington in 1898, and the lynchings of Jim Crow, America’s historical past is scarred by bloodshed born of dehumanization. Violence has too usually been our reply to disagreement. So why can we act shocked now? When cruelty is rewarded, when ridicule is televised, and when threats are disregarded as “simply politics,” phrases inevitably flip into bullets.
Particular person shooters could also be caught. However the tradition that incubates violence can’t be handcuffed. Incivility unchecked, rhetoric divorced from respect, divisions deepened moderately than bridged—these are the true accomplices.
Charlie Kirk’s demise shouldn’t make him a poster boy, nor erase the hurt of his phrases. However it should remind us that life is sacred, that violence is at all times improper, and that if we can’t be taught to disagree with out dehumanizing, America will preserve turning phrases into bullets.
This commentary first appeared at AFRO.com
Frances “Toni” Draper is the writer of the AFRO-American Newspaper (the AFRO), with places of work in Baltimore, Maryland, and Washington, D.C.
 
			








 
							










