America Will Never Be The Same After Charlie Kirk’s Assassination

12m
We will not have a normal show today. I want to talk to you about what has happened over the past 24 hours. I have a lot to say, and I also don't know what to say, at the same time. I’m devastated. Heartbroken. And very, very angry. I’ll try to talk through some of that today, because I just want to talk about Charlie, who he was, the legacy he leaves behind, and where we go from here.

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Ep.1656

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Transcript

We will not have a normal show today.

I want to talk to you about what has happened over the past 24 hours.

I have a lot to say, and I also don't know what to say at the same time.

I'm devastated, heartbroken,

and very, very angry.

And I'll try to talk through some of that today.

There is a lot of news breaking about this shooting and the hunt for the assassin.

As I record this, most of the reports that are coming in are unconfirmed.

So I'm not going to comment on any of those specifics until the details are confirmed.

But for now, I just want to talk about Charlie and who he was, the legacy that he leaves behind, and a little bit about where we go from here.

The last time I saw my friend Charlie Kirk in person was when I appeared with him on stage at the TPUSA Pastor Summit back in the spring.

And I spoke with him backstage beforehand and told him, as I had several times before, that I was incredibly impressed by this institution and this movement that he built.

But he wasn't interested in listening to me compliment him.

He deflected, as always, and started talking,

asking me about myself and saying nice and encouraging things.

A few months before that, in the wake of Trump's victory, Charlie made a point of posting something on X

to give me...

partial credit for helping Trump win.

And it was one of the very few times that I've disagreed with something that Charlie said.

The truth is that he was the primary reason why Trump won.

It was his organizing and advocacy and activism and mobilization that helped to turn the tide.

And yet he wanted to give the credit to other people, even people who didn't deserve it.

And that's the kind of guy that Charlie was.

A very rare type in the world today, even rarer in this business.

So it may seem like a small thing, but Charlie's desire to give other people credit, to point to and praise and lift up other people rather than himself is one of the most profound testaments to his character.

Charlie was a truly great man, great

in personal virtue, great in achievement,

great in his talents.

He was a builder, he was an organizer, he was a fighter, which is a rare combination in this movement.

You got a bunch of big personalities who can inform, entertain, hold your attention on stage or in front of a camera.

And then you have the organizers who know how to orchestrate and build and harness those personalities and point them in the right direction.

Charlie was one of the only eight guys I ever knew who was truly great in both areas.

He was a one-of-a-kind talent.

Everyone who knew him and so many who did not know him personally

could tell that he was destined to be the president of the United States one day.

I would have been proud to vote for him.

Tens of millions of Americans felt the same way.

Charlie was brave.

He would go anywhere, talk to anyone.

He would debate anyone in any environment.

He trusted in his own vast rhetorical skill and in the rightness of his ideas.

And most of all, as a man of deep faith, he trusted in the Lord.

I don't know if he had Isaiah 41.10 written as a mantra in his house somewhere, but it certainly seemed to be written on his heart at least.

Fear not, for I am with you.

Be not dismayed, for I am your God.

I will strengthen you.

Yes, I will help you.

I will uphold you with my righteous right hand.

He knew that the Lord was with him, protecting him, guiding his thoughts and his words, which is really the only way to explain Charlie's nearly supernatural ability to win every debate he ever had with anyone.

God had called him to this moment and blessed him as he rose to it again and again.

Charlie was a patriot.

He loved America.

He fought for her every day.

He died for her.

His central ambition was not for his own personal advancement, but for the well-being and flourishing of this country.

For Charlie, make America great again, that was not just a slogan on a hat.

It was his mission.

It was his great project.

And he did more to complete that mission than you could ever expect one man to do.

Most importantly of all, of course, Charlie was a husband and a father.

He loved his family dearly.

You didn't have to know him or ever meet him in person to know that about him.

It came across in everything he said and did.

This was clearly a man who cherished his family, would have died to make a better world for them

and did.

And now he's gone.

We've seen him die right in front of our eyes on stage.

He died while trying to have a free and civil debate,

which is all that he ever did.

He didn't insult.

He didn't defame.

He didn't shout anyone down.

He invited everyone to come and speak to him, to prove him wrong.

And for that, they killed him.

I have to tell you that as a fellow conservative in the public eye,

you know, I always worried that it would come to this,

that eventually they would start killing us.

But I never thought it would be Charlie.

He was the nicest, most generous,

and charitable of us,

far less inflammatory than plenty of other people in this space, myself included.

And they killed him in spite of that.

Or not in spite, but because he was too effective.

He was too widely beloved, especially among the younger generations.

So they killed him.

I can only be honest with you in this moment and tell you that

I am sad, I am heartbroken,

and I am full of rage.

If you want a kumbaya message of unity and togetherness, you will not get it from me.

Over the past 24 hours, I've seen some in the media, some of the very same people who intentionally stoked murderous hatred against people like Charlie Kirk and Charlie Kirk specifically,

now saying that we need to turn down the temperature and start having conversations.

Well, Charlie tried to have conversations with you on the left, and you killed him for it.

You're killing us in our churches.

You tried to kill our president.

You killed one of our greatest advocates in Charlie Kirk.

You have been openly cheering for and celebrating and encouraging and committing political violence for years.

Antifa BLM,

well-funded, highly orchestrated, widespread movements based in and fueled by violence.

You made a hero out of Luigi Mangioni.

And you celebrate Charlie's death even now.

It's too late to turn the temperature down.

This is not a time to hold hands.

It's a time for justice.

It is a time for good to fight back against evil.

It is time for the righteous to prevail for the sake of our country and for our families and our children and for Charlie.

Many of you have seen all the myriad posts and videos from leftist demons celebrating Charlie's death.

I know we want to tell ourselves that these are fringe voices,

but they aren't.

There's a very large group of people out there who want us dead.

Even in Congress, they tried to have a moment of silence after Charlie's passing, but Democrats jeered and heckled.

In Congress,

this is who they are.

Not on the fringes, in the main.

They could not possibly make themselves any clearer about it.

But I do want to say this.

When I see these rodents gloating now over the death of my friend, I'm, of course, disgusted by it.

Yet also, I truly see it as a powerful tribute to Charlie's life and work.

Charlie had many friends who loved him dearly, many fans who adored and admired him.

That's, without a doubt, the greatest testament to the sort of man he was, no question about it.

But as a true culture warrior, it must be said that the evil gloating of his enemies are accolades in their own right.

May we all be so successful and productive that our enemies celebrate when we die.

May we all be so devastating to the leftist project that they long for our demise.

May we all fight so hard and so effectively that they have no choice but to try to kill us.

May our lives be a problem for these people

and our deaths a relief.

Let them dance on my grave as they dance on Charlie's.

Then I will know that I did my duty.

Our opponents should be happy when we leave the ring.

If they aren't, then we didn't punch hard enough.

Charlie punched harder than anyone.

He did it with a smile.

He did it through speech and debate.

He did it non-violently.

But he was a devastating fighter all the same.

And his opponents are overjoyed

because they think they've gotten rid of him.

But they're wrong.

They have gravely misjudged the situation.

The only thing more powerful than a living fighter is a martyred one.

In life, Charlie motivated and rallied us to put on the armor of God and fight for what we believe in.

In death, he motivates and rallies us all the more.

I want to be very clear that we will not back down after this.

We will not shrink away or go into hiding.

We will not fall silent.

We will not walk in fear.

We will stand taller and prouder than we ever have and be louder and bolder than we've ever been and fight harder than we've ever fought.

You know, they think they can kill the movement by killing us, but in the entire history of the world, that strategy has never worked.

And it won't work now.

I promise you that.

You can kill a man, you can shoot him in the neck on stage, you can spill his blood for the whole world to see, but you cannot kill a cause.

Especially when that cause is nothing else but love of God, love of country, love of family.

That causes truth.

You can't kill the truth.

No matter how many of us you shoot, you cannot kill it.

You know, many of us,

conservatives on the public stage, have seen the death threats and death wishes over the last several hours.

Leftists across social media are making their wish list of who they'd like to see assassinated next.

You know, I've seen my name on the list.

Benz is on it.

Many other names.

I do think the chances of a copycat event are very high.

I do.

And that's why I feel that it's important for me to say that

I'm not going to back down.

I'm not going to hide.

None of us will.

None of us.

Because if we back down, then the demons who killed Charlie will win, and they cannot win.

They will not win.

A day before his death, Charlie posted a picture of Irena, the young woman who was killed on the light rail in Charlotte,

and he added a short caption:

America will never be the same, he wrote.

Amen.

You had no idea how right you were, my friend.

America will never be the same.

It will be better.

Thanks in large part to your work, your legacy, your example, America will ultimately be a better place.

But there's a lot more to be done in the meantime.

The fight continues.

You finished your race, Charlie.

You fought the good fight.

You kept the faith.

And now we'll take it from here.

And we won't give up until the work is done.

Then you can rest in peace knowing that.

Godspeed.