I’ve been haunted every day since Charlie Kirk was assassinated. The graphic video images of his killing are the culmination of a kind of savagery that is appallingly common in America, but which no person should ever have to see. It’s an unspeakable trauma and loss for his loved ones and supporters, and it is a legitimately devastating tragedy for America. The political morass into which we have been sinking for years accelerated to terrifying degrees over the past week.
There is no “but” here. Murder is wrong, and political murder should be unilaterally condemned. Period.
Another principle I hold without equivocation is that speech is not violence, and violence is not speech. I went on record, in real-time, deploring the rioting and violence associated with the protests against George Floyd’s murder at the hands of police in 2020. I also opposed hysterical overreactions from the left about allegedly problematic incidents involving nonpublic figures, as well as organizations cowardly bending to the whims of a moral panic that fairly deserved to be called “cancel culture.” And I also put a spotlight on the wanton police violence inflicted on peaceful protesters that same summer.
That’s why I feel qualified to call the “reckoning” following Kirk’s murder — currently being perpetrated by the ruling party in the United States government — a moral panic, a moment of shameless hypocrisy and opportunism, an appalling assault on free speech and a level of government overreach that should send chills down the spine of any American.
And it’s why I’m genuinely terrified by how the Trump administration, MAGA media and some of their “centrist” fellow travelers are cherry-picking a handful of people acting crudely and stupidly on the internet by making light of Kirk’s murder and using them to justify or excuse an ideological crackdown on Americans.
Free speech doesn’t mean you can’t lose your job, but it does mean the government can’t go after you for even the most “offensive” speech, as long as it falls short of a direct incitement to violence.
The New York Times, citing two senior Trump officials Monday, reported that the administration’s goal “was to categorize as domestic terrorism left-wing activity that they said led to violence, a continuation of existing efforts by federal agencies to try to punish liberal groups they have accused of funding or otherwise supporting violent protests.” And Attorney General Pam Bondi on Tuesday said, “We will absolutely target you, go after you, if you are targeting anyone with hate speech.” (There is no “hate speech” exception to the First Amendment, and the government has not presented evidence that left-leaning political action is fomenting “terrorism.”)
To be very clear, in a country with increasingly fewer labor protections and a general “at will employment” understanding — it’s just part of the system that you can be fired for making statements that your employer deems bad for business. Praising murder could certainly fall among that criteria. Free speech doesn’t mean you can’t lose your job, but it does mean the government can’t go after you for even the most “offensive” speech, as long as it falls short of a direct incitement to violence.
But that’s what’s happening now. And for anyone who has even once described themselves as a “free speech” advocate, the government taking steps to effectively outlaw criticism of Kirk should be far more appalling than even the most tasteless, vicious, cruel social media post making light of his murder.
Bad ideas, bad thoughts, hurtful words are part of America’s tradition of free expression. Bringing the brute force of government down on one side of the political aisle, and framing it as a national security crisis like “terrorism” should be anathema to anyone who believes in the letter or spirit of the First Amendment.
Trump administration officials are demanding an employment purge of anyone accused of “celebrat[ing] or mock[ing] the assassination of a fellow American.” People are being doxxed, fired and threatened over mean things they expressed about a political activist who the day before his death posted to X, “Islam is the sword the left is using to slit the throat of America.”
This is the kind of incendiary speech that was so common to Kirk — and Trump and MAGA in general — that it passes by unnoticed.
But the people in power who are threatening an unprecedented crackdown on free thought have not defined where the line that must not be crossed is with regards to commenting on Kirk’s murder. If Vice President JD Vance’s comments on Monday as the guest host of “The Charlie Kirk Show” are any indication, it’s any person or institution that expressed something negative about Kirk — including citing Kirk’s own work and ideas. Vance said that “by celebrating that murder, apologizing for it, and emphasizing not Charlie’s innocence, but the fact that he said things they don’t like, many of these people are creating an environment where things like this are inevitably going to happen.”
The people in power have not defined where the line that must not be crossed is with regards to commenting on Kirk’s murder.
White House deputy chief of staff Stephen Miller — unlike Vance, never one to hide his demagoguery behind false pleasantness — said: “We are gonna channel all the anger we have over the organized campaign that led to this assassination to uproot & dismantle these terrorist networks … we are going to use every resource we have at the DOJ, Homeland Security & throughout this govt to dismantle & destroy these networks.”








