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This is the most unbelievable thing I think I've ever seen. God is here and you can feel it. Charlie would have loved this. The story of Jesus shows the truth about those in power—‘the worst thing that you can do, is telling the truth about people and they hate it.’ ‘We’ve got to shut this guy up. Why don’t we just kill him? That’ll shut him up.’ ‘Blessed are those who mourn for they will be comforted.’ The main thing about Charlie’s message was that he was bringing the gospel and calling for repentance. ‘Politics is not the final answer.’ ‘The only real solution is Jesus.’ Christianity begins with repentance: ‘forgive us our sins… And then it becomes possible to forgive other people.’ That is the only way forward in this country. He was fearless; there was no hate in his heart. Thank you and God bless.

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Speaker 0 recalls watching Charlie Kirk’s memorial in Malaysia and an “extremely coordinated onslaught” by high-level actors who claimed the passage was “not just offensive, but was one of the worst blood libels ever uttered in a public setting since World War two” and that it “intended to imply that Israel was behind the killing of Charlie Kirk.” Speaker 1 frames the passage as the Christian gospel: “Ultimately, he was a Christian evangelist” who “tells the truth about the people in power” and that “they hate it and they become obsessed with making him stop”—“they end up torturing him to death to kill him, and then... it becomes the world's biggest religion.” He says he did not intend to attack Jews, criticizes antisemitism and Zionism for seeing everything as about Jews, calling that attitude “sick” and “bad for this country,” and urges treating Israel as a country with overlapping interests. He cites ADL pressure and stresses repentance in the Christian message.

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Emotional reflections on Susie Wiles's tears and the sense that 'God is here' as the speaker hopes the country moves in this direction. He recalls a Jerusalem story about truth-tellers and power, noting that 'We must make him stop talking' and that 'Everything is inverted' and 'Blessed are those who mourn for they will be comforted.' The main message: Charlie Kirk 'bringing the gospel to the country' and 'calling for them to repent,' showing that 'Politics at its core is a process of critiquing other people and getting them to change' while 'the only real solution is Jesus.' He is 'Truly fearless to his last moment' and says, 'That's a sad person. That's a broken person. That's person who needs help' and 'That's a person who needs Jesus.' The gathering affirms 'This is the way' and the obvious presence of God in the room. 'Thank you and God bless.'

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Charlie Kirk—a patriot, conservative, leader, and warrior—was described as a true believer in freedom and the power of young people. "Only Christ is king, our lord and savior. Our sins are washed away by the blood of Jesus. Fear God and fear no man." He started Turning Point USA to change our politics, building a movement aimed at truth. He argued this is not a political or cultural war, but a spiritual war, with "Faith and family first." "There is a God, and as Charlie would say, it is not us. We're sinners saved only by grace in need of the gospel." He stressed that "we always did need less government" but "a lot more God." He died speaking the truth, waging war not with a weapon, but with a tent, a microphone, his mind, and the truth. "The gates of hell could not prevail against him."

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Charlie was murdered for boldly using his voice to stand up for the truth, for the bible, and for God. And silence from the pulpit is just not acceptable. The season of lukewarm Christianity is over. My church called it what it is, demonic and evil, and that's called leadership. I'm hoping that we see churches so flooded with people tomorrow like we've never before. But if your pastor is too afraid to even acknowledge what happened tomorrow or worse, too politically correct to take a stand, then I'm telling you, it's time to find a new church. This is not business as usual. This is spiritual warfare.

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He did a lot to stifle my career, and suppressed me in many ways. And I antagonized him a lot and mocked him and ridiculed him and attacked his credibility. He was my opponent. But I would never wish death upon him. It is undeniable that he was a towering figure in American conservatism. He died at 31 years old and left a legacy that many people could not achieve in many lifetimes. And ultimately, that is why he was killed. Anyone, everyone, fighting and winning that spiritual battle for Christ and for his kingdom will be persecuted for his sake. And for that, I consider him a true martyr. Charlie Kirk was a good man. God bless him. And I pray for the repose of his soul, for his family, for him.

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Speaker honors Charlie as driven by Christianity and devotion to God, urging us to 'live our lives in perfect imitation of Christ' and to turn 'every day and every moment and every interaction into a prayer.' He says Charlie understood that 'it's only by surrender to God that God's power can flow into our lives and make us effective human beings.' Charlie's passions included free speech; 'the free flow of information was the soil, the water, the sunlight for democracy' and conversation as a healer of division. Personal notes recount a granddaughter leaving for college in Europe, 'packed a bible' and saying 'I want to live more like Charlie.' In a July 2021 talk they discussed 'the risks that all of us take when we challenge entrenched interests, the physical risk.'

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Susie Wiles’ tears and the room’s sense of God's presence are described. He recalls a scene from two thousand years ago in Jerusalem where Jesus tells the truth about power and others want to stop him. He notes 'Everything is inverted and the beatitudes tell it, I think the most crisply. Blessed are those who mourn for they will be comforted.' He says Charlie Kirk brought the gospel to the country, calling for repentance. 'Politics at its core is a process of critiquing other people and getting them to change. Christianity, the gospel message, the message of Jesus begins with repentance.' 'In other words, forgive us our sins, meditate on what we've done wrong, how we've fallen short.' 'That is the only way forward in this country.' 'This is the way. Right here. This is the way.' 'Thank you, and God bless.'

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Charlie Kirk's death is a dark moment for America and a turning point—a call to action. He founded Turning Point USA and was "the greatest man I've ever personally known" and "the least hypocritical man" who "practiced what he preached." I met him in a Chicago diner in 2012; he slept on couches while building the movement, and Rush Limbaugh said, "everywhere I go, I run into Charlie Kirk." He coached me through my darkest days, helped with payroll, and on stage urged pastors to pray for me. "The price for his message was his life." "Justice just isn't there for those who deserve it." Without accountability, we live under the illusion of freedom. "God was using Charlie to wake up this generation," and "A million more Charlie Kirks are gonna be born." The future of this nation will be determined by the choice you make.

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Speaker 1 describes Charlie Kirk’s Christianity as sincere, saying it informed every part of his life—from his marriage and the way he treated his children to how he approached disagreement and thought of others—always primarily as people. He was younger, which made him hard to take seriously at first, but over more than ten years the speaker learned from him, especially how to disagree with people on topics they take seriously without hating them or feeling bitterness. Behind-the-scenes tensions existed in foreign policy debates within the GOP, but Kirk liked people. He would say privately that he agreed with them on some points. The speaker was struck that there was a person behind the views, which inspired him, and he believes God commands that and that Kirk lived it. Speaker 0 adds that Kirk treated everybody with respect, loved people, wanted their salvation, and sought their relationship with God, when disagreeing.

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Charlie Kirk's death is a moment for America. It's also a turning point for you and me, a call to action. Charlie was Turning Point USA. He was the least hypocritical man I've ever known and he practiced what he preached. He was a Buckley-Limbaugh figure. Kierkegaard said, 'the most painful state of being is remembering the future, particularly the one that you'll never have.' I met him in a Chicago diner in 2012; he spoke about building a movement of young people. At the Turning Point Faith Conference, he summoned me on stage to pray for me, 'as if it depended on God.' He helped me make payroll. Charlie answered, 'courage from my faith.' He did not point left or right but up. The price for his message was his life. Without accountability, we live under the illusion of freedom. A million more Charlie Kirks are gonna be born.

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Emotional moment as Susie Wiles and others respond to what is happening, with a sense that 'God is here.' The speaker says Charlie Kirk would have loved this, calling him a Christian evangelist, and recalls a story of Jesus in Jerusalem truth-telling about those in power, noting the impulse to silence him, even kill him. He emphasizes the inversion of expectations in the Beatitudes, especially 'Blessed are those who mourn, for they will be comforted.' The message highlighted is that Charlie was bringing the gospel to the country, calling for repentance, contrasting politics as critique with Christianity, which begins with repentance. He argues that 'the only real solution is Jesus' and that 'politics at its core is a process of critiquing other people and getting them to change.' The speaker affirms Charlie's fearlessness and the divine presence, concluding with 'This is the way' and 'thank you, and God bless.'

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Speaker describes a gathering with God's presence, hoping for direction because God is here. He recalls Charlie Kirk as a Christian evangelist who loved groups and spoke truth about those in power, recalling Jerusalem and the impulse to silence truth, including 'Why don't we just kill him?' He notes 'Everything is inverted' and 'Blessed are those who mourn for they will be comforted.' Charlie's message brought the gospel to the country, calling for repentance; politics cannot be the final answer because the only real solution is Jesus. 'Politics at its core is a process of critiquing other people and getting them to change.' Christianity begins with repentance; 'forgive us our sins' precedes forgiving others. He was fearless, with no hate in his heart, and he said, 'That's a sad person, that's a broken person, that's a person who needs help, That's a person who needs Jesus.' This is the way.

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"Charlie inspired millions, and tonight, all who knew him and loved him are united in shock and horror." "Charlie was a patriot who devoted his life to the cause of open debate and the country that he loved so much, The United States Of America." "He's a martyr for truth and freedom, and there's never been anyone who was so respected by youth." "Charlie was also a man of deep, deep faith, and we take comfort in the knowledge that he is now at peace with God in heaven." "Our prayers are with his wife, Erica, the two young, beloved children, and his entire family who he loved more than anything in the world." "Charlie Kirk traveled the nation joyfully engaging with everyone interested in good faith debate." "Radical left political violence has hurt too many innocent people and taken too many lives." "An assassin tried to silence him with a bullet, but he failed because together, we will ensure that his voice, his message, and his legacy will live on for countless generations to come."

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Speaker calls for a respectful conversation despite differences: "You guys for a respectful conversation even though we see things very differently." They say, "I think God has a better plan for you." They add, "maybe you have an encounter with God and Jesus loves all of you. And he'll he can transform your life. He transformed my life." They describe life as "And every day is a new day, and it's a hopeful, beautiful life ahead of you." They state, "God loves every single one of us. We're all sinners, and Jesus died I mean, you've definitely been the most respectful one that I've seen." They credit the Holy Spirit: "it's not me. If it was me, I'd be yelling and screaming. It's the holy spirit." They close with, "Jesus has gone to work on my life." "And so god bless you guys. Thank you for a great Charlie, thank you for coming."

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Approve of evil. You're not helping people. You're hurting them when you do that. You know, in the passage that everybody reads at their wedding, but nobody obeys, first Corinthians 13, Paul says, love does not rejoice in wrongdoing. Love rejoices in the truth. Love always protects. Love always perseveres. If you wanna love people, you protect them. You don't enable them to do evil. You don't approve of what they wanna do that god doesn't want them to do. And to the people who hate Charlie, to the people who celebrate his murder, I don't want to spend a lot of time on this. Charlie was doing this to reach out to you. Charlie was doing this to love you. You don't love people by enabling their continued rebellion against the God of the universe. The man in the white hat was me. Don't believe in these crazy conspiracy theories. Charlie Kirk was literally like a son to me. I have three sons. He was like my fourth son. We drove four miles somewhat. Charlie was killed instantly and felt absolutely no pain. He was with Jesus, absent from the body, present with the Lord. Mikey McCoy is an absolute hero. The hospital staff and the law enforcement were amazing. Catherine Locastro came...

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It's tough that this is the truth, but it is. You really only ever see the impact of someone's life when they're gone. Does anybody miss them? Has anything changed? And in the case of Charlie Kirk, everything's changed. Charlie Kirk was a cultural icon, not just a political icon. He's been eulogized by Hollywood celebrities and NFL superstars. the country music Jesus loves every single one of you in this place tonight. Charlie Kirch with Jesus. Charlie is a guy that's gonna be very, very much missed, and his legacy is gonna live on forever with Turning Point and what he's done with only thirty one years on this planet. So tonight, since he was one of the ones that stuck up for this song, let's play this one for Charlie. Here's try that in a small tap.

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Speaker 0 foregrounds grace, forgiveness, and integrity in leadership. "I loved what Erica Kirk did on the microphone at the memorial for Charlie Kirk, and when she stated that she forgives the killer of Charlie Kirk, and that was true Christianity," and "not even to want him to get capital punishment because you don't wanna take away that chance that that person can repent and come to the lord Jesus Christ." "It's not about being good... It's about the ultimate good deed that was done by Jesus Christ... by dying on that cross and rising again to take away all of our sins, meaning that his grace covers a multitude of sins." "Jesus Christ is available to you." Speaker 1: "it's one of the most historical, accurately historical records there is." "Our actions speak louder than words." "the first order of any government is to protect its citizens" and there have been "multiple failures over many decades." "it's not about left and right anymore... it's about doing the right thing." "candidates will be fielded." "not looking for career politicians" "people that understand what life is all about." Speaker 0: "Absolutely. ... We've had enough of career politicians... people are looking for something real now, some something true, something with integrity." "This is why the people love Tommy Robinson. ... millions of people at his call came onto the streets," "he is a man of integrity. He's a man of honesty. He's a working class man that speaks the truth."

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She recalls that 'Charlie Kirk was a person of faith' and asks what that means in action—how the 'least of these' would be treated. In Arizona this weekend, what began as a memorial was not just grief but a movement claiming divine permission to rule: 'It was a revival meeting wrapped in a memorial, a political rally dressed as church.' Donald Trump stood on stage calling Kirk a martyr; other politicians pledged to carry out his mission, and the crowd cheered as if a sacred fire had been lit. She argues this was religious nationalism on full display, not faith finding public expression. The language—'Take the nation back for God. Restore America's covenant. This is a holy calling'—is described as the language of domination, where faith fused with power demands obedience and divides the country. See beyond the illusion and remove ideological filters.

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Grateful for Charlie Kirk’s life and his moment at America Fest 2023 about submitting to God’s will, quoting Isaiah chapter six verse eight: "Here I am Lord. Send me." Eleven days ago, God accepted that surrender and called him to his side. I confronted his murdered body, and there was "no fame. There was no fear. No agony." He blinked and saw his savior in paradise. On the tarmac I told Usha Vance, "you will get through these fifteen minutes in the next fifteen minutes after that." After his assassination, we witnessed revival: people opened a Bible, prayed, and returned to church. "Every time you make a decision, it puts a mark on your soul." Charlie died with incomplete work, not with unfinished business. His mission: revive the American family; reach the lost boys of the West; "That man, that young man, I forgive him." TPUSA faith will grow.

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Speaks of a movement on college campuses formed ten or twelve years ago, to convince young Americans that ours is the greatest country in the history of the world and that Marxism was bad. Skepticism proved wrong as a renaissance emerged, challenging the idea that America was evil and foundational beliefs wrong. The movement taught that 'the highest calling' is to be in a successful marriage and to raise productive children, and that ours is 'the greatest, most exceptional nation that has ever existed in the history of all of mankind'. Charlie Kirk is praised for extraordinary knowledge and 'wisdom' at age thirty-one. He was bold and engaged with those he disagreed with, inviting dialogue on campuses, CNN, podcasts, radio, and television. The service honors him and ends with a Christian message of creation, sin, Jesus, resurrection, and a reunion in a new heaven and a new earth with Charlie.

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"Christians need to step up." "As someone who's Jewish, you know, Jews are point o 2% of the world." "We're 2% of America." "We're not trying to take over anything." "I would love to see Christians return back to the church." "I would love to see Christians get back to Jesus." "So Charlie Kirk was a Christian." "Don't get it twisted, but he honored both books, the Old Testament, which are the five books of of Moses, and the New Testament, the teachings of Jesus." "So it doesn't have to be mutually exclusive." "There's no better role model for young men than Charlie Kirk."

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We had our disagreements. Where we did agree is that he would go to these college campuses and proclaim the name of Jesus Christ. And ultimately, that is why he was killed. The gunmen that killed him, they hated him because of his defense of Christian morality. Charlie Kirk cannot call himself a Christian anymore. Sorry, you forfeited that. I do not wanna hear and you cannot allow Charlie Kirk to go to one more public event, one more question and answer, one more ask me anything without being protested, without being shouted down, without being interrogated about this. This guy goes around from campus to campus in the most artificial and phony and fake way talking about, oh, God, God made me very blessed that I control $500,000,000. And then you go around from campus to campus making excuses for a famine?

Tucker Carlson

Full Speech: Tucker’s Charlie Kirk Memorial & Their Best Moments on God, Christianity, and Hope
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An emotive room becomes a platform for a fierce blend of faith, liberty, and accountability. The tribute to Charlie Kirk presents him as a Christian evangelist whose work fused political engagement with the gospel, insisting that the deepest solution is Jesus and that true change begins with repentance. Tucker Carlson notes Kirk’s fearlessness and his habit of turning conversations toward humility, forgiveness, and the belief that politics cannot bear the weight of ultimate answers. The message emphasizes that personal transformation precedes public reforms and that truth requires a conscience awakened by faith. Discussion then moves to the nature of civilization itself: God’s order and distinctives—between male and female, sacred and secular, good and evil—form the backbone of Western life, and erasing these lines threatens chaos. The speakers argue for an informed, active citizenry who study, read deeply, and resist being passive. They describe college campuses as battlegrounds where conservatives face restrictions, yet Gen Z men are described as among the most conservative in decades. A spiritual revival is presented as a supernatural move, not merely a reaction to material conditions. Across the dialogue runs a call to action: sign up for ballot-chasing, write to swing voters, homeschool your children, and promote a society that values truth, faith, and liberty. The premise is that liberty without learning deteriorates, and an informed, faithful populace is the strongest defense against tyranny. Scriptural references anchor the argument—Jeremiah, Psalms—and the speakers insist that a culture must live out its faith through courageous public participation. In closing, the hosts express cautious hope, grounded in faith, for a future shaped by prayer, study, and active citizenship.

The Megyn Kelly Show

Charlie Kirk's Moving Memorial, the Power of Forgiveness, and Van Jones' Smear, with Michael Knowles
Guests: Michael Knowles
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Charlie’s memorial drew as many as 200,000 people to a stadium in Phoenix, a moment many described as a state funeral and a spiritual milestone beyond politics. Megyn Kelly and Michael Knowles reflect on how, at 18, Charlie started Turning Point USA with a donor insisting on the first half before funding, raising $50,000 in two days. He had no elite connections, no wealthy family—yet he built a national platform by reaching out to people he disagreed with and by seeing public service as a calling to save the country. Erica Kirk delivered a standstill moment: she forgave her husband’s killer, echoing the gospel with the line, 'Father, forgive them, for they know not what they do.' The crowd rose, moved by a gesture many described as superhuman. Michael Knowles highlights that Trump’s memorial remarks framed forgiveness as a core gospel value, even while acknowledging human anger. Speakers like Steven Miller intensified the call to defend civilization, and some attendees used pyro to honor Charlie’s life in a celebratory, not morbid, way. A visiting observer, Sana Ibrahimi, a PhD candidate, contrasted Christianity’s forgiveness with Islam’s fear-based theology, noting the distinct paths to the divine Logos and the possibility of God turning evil to good. Across media coverage, voices from the left were accused of inflaming hatred and minimizing Charlie Kirk’s legacy. Pacman described the memorial as a 'rage fest' to be denied; Karen Atia of the Washington Post faced backlash for dehumanizing remarks about dead babies and lost her job. Matthew Dow faced termination for remarks about Kirk; others lamented chilling effects on journalists; Van Jones moved from an attack on Kirk to a later op-ed claiming a pathway to dialogue, while still defending his earlier stance. The discussion framed political violence as a left-driven hazard, with calls to punish incitement and to fire or ostracize those who celebrate violence. Ultimately the dialogue wrestles with whether scorched-earth tactics or constructive engagement will prevail. The host argues that order and liberty are compatible and necessary for a healthy public square, citing Plato's Gorgias to illustrate rehabilitating wrongdoers and protecting the innocent. A nationwide poll cited on air shows Democrats misperceiving who bears responsibility for the violence, underscoring the challenge of reaching across the aisle. The takeaway is accountability, open debate, and a willingness to stand firm while continuing to speak truth, as the tour resumes coast-to-coast.
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