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Talk about a love torn child. This is probably his first real relationship, and somebody was disparaging the person that he loved. He sat on that building for thirty minutes before he took the shot. "Why do you wait until the first word trans came up, then he took the shot?" "You think he heard it? You could he could hear it." "I think he could hear it. I think this was motivated emotionally." "The evidence here is overwhelming. He said, Charlie Kirk, I can't stand this hate anymore. I'm gonna take him out." "The testimony ... he had become more left wing. He etched the statements that are made by the left about Republicans and conservatives and Charlie Kirk fascist on the bullet casings." "He made a joke about it in his last text." "The evidence has now come out. He was motivated by hate. He was motivated by left wing radicalism." "Left wing radicalism got this kid. He went up to a roof, and he murdered our friend, and that's what happened."

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“While I didn't agree with his ideas, shooting someone that we disagree with, even if they're vociferous and loud and out there, is so colossally wrong headed.” “you won't find me shedding any tears.” “We cannot think or talk that way.” “That is not okay.” I lost my brother through gun violence. “There's no winning. We'll never win this way. There's no idea that if we cheer on our opponents being hurt or harmed in any way, that we win as a society. And we all lose.” This is a tragedy that not only the person who is killed experiences, but the entire family and community around that person. “Where do we go when violence is the only solution? … the final solution.” “People are walking around with weapons of war. This is a weapon of war.” “I don't know what killed him.” “But more often than not, we're seeing people killed with weapons of war … It was a sniper rifle.” “That's what these weapons are for.” “If that's why he was murdered. I'm assuming that's what it was. We don't know.”

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The discussion centers on motive in a shooting. "we don't have a motive yet. We don't know yet." "That's CNN's position. Mean, he just happened to fire the gun in celebration." They note "law enforcement hasn't laid out a direct motive" though "they laid out a lot of evidence here of these messages." The panel debates whether the shooter was "a left wing activist who hated Charlie Kirk." "I believe anyone engaged in acts of violence should be prosecuted" and "we should follow the money. Anyone funding acts of violence, we should." They claim "the left ... overwhelmingly celebrates this," citing "Blue Sky ... leftist celebrating the murder of Charlie Kirk" and "over 50% of Democrats saying violence against Elon Musk is justified." They discuss violence on both sides and conclude, "There are deranged lunatics who attack people both right and left." Sen. Cruz, thanks for your time tonight.

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"These kids, did extraordinary things, but they never should have been put in that position in the first place." "This was a madman." "He was an all purpose hater, by the way." "Hated groups left, right, you name it." "There's no way to pin an ideology on this, and I think people should remember this as the facts come out, about this manifesto." "But what I learned from this once again is that guns and we're a proud hunting state." "There's a lot of law abiding gun owners in Minnesota, but there's gotta be more we can"

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Speaker 1: Of course, as you all know, in the wake of Charlie's murder, there was an incredible amount of angry discourse from the right. Blaming the Democrats, blaming liberals saying, you're the reason this happened. Only to find out, surprise, 22 year old white dude, loved guns, raised by two parents, lived in a good home, dad as a minister, also a sheriff, didn't check it in boxes. Y'all thought he would check, did he? Speaker 0: Okay. First of all, a coat of mascara would be your friend. Speaker 0: That is disgusting. That was absolutely disgusting. Fuck her. Speaker 0: It's it's weird how she lost the points about him being a furry loving trans dating.

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Why are we cheering for someone getting shot? He's dead. Like, no matter what political beliefs are, should not be cheering that someone got shot. He has a family. We do. We I value everyone's beliefs, but we should not be cheering as a class that someone got shot. He has a family. Yes. And who shot them? A transgender person. Oh. Oh. Oh. So that's what it is. Yes. Five males. It doesn't matter. You should not be cheering that someone got shot. Yes. You should not be cheering that someone got shot. Yeah. He's still, like, attacking you guys don't care what other people got.

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Speaker 0 says, "If you're celebrating the death of Charlie Kirk, you're a bad person. You're going to hell." Speaker 1 adds, "May. Fuck Charlie Kirk," and declares, "The off ramp to the high road is closed," insisting they won't feel guilty about a "bullshit hero" who spread harm. They stress, "This has nothing to do with conservative versus liberal" or with Democrats versus Republicans, and point out the alleged suspect is "an old white guy." They predict media will misframe the event as "an isolated incident by a lone shooter" and that "it's gonna end up being a white guy." They acknowledge sadness with "Abso fucking lutely," but conclude, "However, fuck that guy. God’s timing is always right." "Good day, goofies."

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"I don't know who did this. And I sure hope that it was not from the left that would be better." "But it doesn't matter because the first Trump assassination also was not from the left." "It was just a guy who was going to also had Biden on his target list." "And it's been made in the ideology of this far right that you're seeing online." "It's part of a line, Brett Kavanaugh, Trump assassination, how Charlie Kirk," "It doesn't matter that it wasn't from the left because that part has been erased in the common litany of grievances." "Absolutely." "I mean, it's just it's just about the, momentum of violence. Right?" "If one side keeps punching, that's bad, that's really bad." "But it's much worse when one side punches, the other punches back." "That causes an escalation."

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Discussion centers on Charlie's views and reactions: "He was pro pro second amendment and so on." Speakers expect backlash: "People are gonna talk shit and say, see, is why." They reference a video "right before he gets hit," noting: "As a matter of fact, if I'm not mistaken, when I'm watching the video right before he gets hit, was." The talk shifts to mass shootings: "Do you know how many mass shooters there have been in America over the last ten years? Counting or not counting gang violence. Great." One participant adds, "I didn't watch it except for So" while another says, "he's literally they're literally asking him about mass shootings. I don't find that to be a coincidence either." The closing claim: "If I had my guess, this is a deep state hit. 100%. Our country's on the brink."

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My sympathy to Charlie Kirk's family and to Charlie Kirk who obviously is, you know, become a target for somebody. I don't know whether it's political violence because I don't know who did it. I know they seem to have somebody in custody. But I will say that political violence unfortunately has been ratcheting up in this country. We saw the shootings, the killings in Minnesota. We've seen other political violence occur in other states, and I I would just say it's gotta stop. And I think there are people who are fomenting it in this country. I think the president's rhetoric often foments it. We've seen the January 6 rioters who clearly, you know, have tripped a new era of political violence.

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Participants discuss the news that Charlie Kirk was shot, with uncertainty about whether he is dead: "Murder for having a different opinion from somebody else." They note, "I haven't seen anything that said confirmed." Rumors about who shot him spur debate: "a supporter shooting their gun off in celebration"—"That's a crazy take." They stress we "We don't know any of full details of this yet" and that "it's not a tweet. It's not on their Twitter account" or anything, with clips shared by "Dave Portnoy reposted this." The mood is horror and condemnation: "Nobody deserves that." They condemn the culture of division, call out "paid propagandists masquerading as the news," and warn this event could either spur meaningful dialogue or fuel violence and fear. The speakers fear the impact on political courage and discourse.

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"A human being with a soul, a free man, has a right to say what he believes, not to hurt other people, but to express his views." "that thinking that she just articulated on camera there is exactly what got us to a place where some huge and horrifying percentage of young people think it's okay to shoot people you disagree with, to kill Nazis for saying things they don't like." "Well, there's free speech which of course we all acknowledge is important so so important." "But then there's this thing called hate speech." "Hate speech, of course, is any speech that the people in power hate, but they don't define it that way." "They define it as speech that hurts people, speech that is tantamount to violence." "And we punish violence, don't we? Of course, we do."

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"First of all, you know, I'd heard different things about his ideology." "He wasn't a registered democrat or republican." "He may have been a groyker, which is a follower of Nick Fuentes, who's on the right." "But I'll say this, it shouldn't matter." "This has happened to democrats." "This has happened to republicans." "The shooters were on both sides of the extreme." "And so what should matter is that we should all come together to, one, tone down the rhetoric, and two, keep our events safe, and and three, make sure that this doesn't happen again." "And so playing the blame game is not toning down the rhetoric." "Playing the blame game only makes the rhetoric and the problem worse."

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Speaker claims, "Brother Charlie got murdered, assassinated a few days ago, but the truth is he was assassinated a few years ago." They argue that electing people who demonize their political opponents leads to violence, adding, "So you might have pulled the trigger yourself." The speaker asks, "Who demonize political opponents? Who call political opponents enemies, Hitler, a threat to democracy, who say because we disagree, if you see someone, walk up to them and if they're eating in a restaurant, tell them they're not welcome, get in their face." They warn, "When you start saying stuff like that, calling your political opponents Nazis, fascists, stuff like that. Well, sooner or later, a kook is gonna hear that. A crazy person is going to hear that, and they're going to act on it."

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- "And, we all lost, no matter what side of the political aisle you're on to, we lost something important in America today." - "But, the case goes on." - "The investigation goes on." - "There's a lot of piecing of evidence together." - "We don't have a shooter tonight." - "We have a couple leads, couple people that were released that probably aren't the shooter." - "They have a couple hot leads." - "There's a little bit of foreign intelligence." - "And I think over the next couple of days, we will learn a lot more and hopefully, we will bring to justice the evil person who did what, they did to Charlie today." - "I am hearing that they do have a couple of people of interest." - "That's the latest I heard from law" - "That's correct." - "Law enforcement." - "You're hearing the same thing."

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Speaker 1: "Just because the other side... jokes about the bad things that happened to them, I don't think that makes it okay for us to turn around and do the same." Speaker 0: "No. We need to stop... the left just haven't cucked out enough." Speaker 0: "Trump is fucking insane because he has support from 90% of the conservatives in the Republican party who are entirely un American." Speaker 1: "One person is dead... a swing state voter." Speaker 1: "We don't know what the motivation of the shooter was." Speaker 1: "Just because there is fire burning doesn't give us leave to throw more wood on it." Speaker 0: "Donald Trump wanted absolute criminal immunity." Speaker 0: "Democracy only works when everybody participates." Speaker 1: "I reject this framing entirely."

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We think that Charlie Kirk just got shot in the neck. In real talk, I am not truly celebrating that he got shot in the neck. I think it's really sad for his family because I know he was a father. And if he does pass away from this, hopefully not, hopefully so, that is not good because bringing kids up in a broken family is never good. And gun violence, again, I think we should go back to having this conversation and who's allowed to have access to these guns because now public figures are getting shot left and right. I mean, it's not every other day, but truly, what a tragedy.

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"Do you accept, Carrie, that this is a it's not just a one-sided problem? The political violence and violent rhetoric is a problem on both sides of the divide, and it's incumbent on everybody in a position of authority and influence to take the lead here in trying to to just tone things down." "There's been a few cases where it goes from from the right to the left, but there's been an exorbitant number where it's coming from the left to the right. And you can't deny that. If you add it all up, it's just more violence. I mean, president Trump was nearly assassinated. There's another attempt on his life." "The media has to take credit for what they have caused, the chaos they've caused in our country, and they haven't done it. And until they do, they need to be turned off, canceled, muted. They're absolutely abhorrent."

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Transcript excerpt: 'Charlie Kirk got shot and he's dead.' The speaker follows: 'Finally, finally, somebody with a gun, which is almost everybody in The Fucking States, grew up hair and fucking went and shot somebody on the right side.' The passage ends with: 'Thank you. Can we keep this up, plea' The remarks express celebration of violence against a political figure and request to continue such acts. The tone centers on the shooting of a public figure and uses profanity to emphasize approval and a desire for further incidents. These lines appear to celebrate the act and call for more such acts.

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"I'm not saying she deserved it, but I'm saying God's timing is always right." "These people are absolutely despicable." "They're cheering the fact that a man was out speaking to a crowd in public, got shot in the neck, and blood was spurting out of his neck like it was a water hose." "It hasn't even been two hours." "But these people saying these things? Disgusting." "It's interesting how all this dramatic high level violence is happening against people on the right and not the left." "I'll be sending an article out later today or early tomorrow explaining this whole situation in detail." "The link to this is on my profile. Just go there, click the link, drop your email, and hit subscribe." "Anyway, that's all I got for now. We'll see you in the next one."

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Consider the shooter, who came from an affluent background and displayed signs of hatred in his manifesto. Our children are being radicalized to hate the very country that has provided for them. Despite having everything, he resorted to violence. We must address the radicalization of young people, as I see a growing animosity among them. Celebrating someone's death, like having dance parties in response to violence, is not something I support. It's crucial to acknowledge and focus on these issues.

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The panel debates motive, with "we don't have a motive yet. We don't know yet" and "Law enforcement hasn't laid out a direct motive. They've laid out a lot of evidence here of these messages." They cite "they said that he was a left wing activist who hated Charlie Kirk." "Look. I believe anyone engaged in acts of violence should be prosecuted and go to jail." They claim "There has been an enormous amount, and CNN has been guilty of this, of both sides ism." They argue "It is the left that overwhelmingly celebrates this" and "look at Blue Sky and it is a cesspool of leftist celebrating the murder of of Charlie Kirk." The discussion touches polling: "the polls the vast majority of Democrats believe a Republican and a Trump supporter." "Senator Ted Cruz, thanks for your time tonight."

The Megyn Kelly Show

Donald Trump Survives Assassination Attempt at Rally, with Lowry, Sexton, Prager, Bolling, and More
Guests: Lowry, Sexton, Prager, Bolling
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Good evening, everyone. I'm Megyn Kelly. Breaking news from Butler, Pennsylvania: former President Donald Trump was the target of an assassination attempt, grazed by a bullet but is reported safe. The Butler County District Attorney confirmed that an audience member was killed, and the shooter is dead, likely shot by law enforcement. Another individual is in serious condition. Video footage shows Trump, bloodied but resilient, raising his fist and urging the crowd to "fight," demonstrating his determination despite the chaos. Rich Lowry from National Review commented on the shocking nature of the event, suggesting that the heightened rhetoric surrounding Trump has created a dangerous atmosphere. He expressed deep concern for the state of the country, reflecting on historical assassination attempts and their impact on political history. The discussion highlighted the emotional weight of the moment and the potential consequences of such violence on American democracy. The hosts and guests discussed the implications of the attack, with some expressing anger over the treatment of Trump and the rhetoric used against him. They noted the resilience shown by Trump and his supporters during the incident, emphasizing the need for unity and a return to civility in political discourse. The conversation also touched on the role of the media in shaping perceptions of Trump and the potential for increased support for him following this incident. Eyewitness accounts described the chaos during the shooting, with people initially mistaking gunfire for fireworks. The bravery of attendees who stood their ground was noted, as well as the need for improved security measures at such events. The Secret Service's response was praised, but questions were raised about how the shooter was able to access a vantage point to fire at Trump. As the discussion continued, the guests reflected on the broader implications of political violence and the need for accountability among political leaders. They criticized the left for its inflammatory rhetoric and the normalization of violence against political opponents. The conversation underscored the urgency of addressing these issues to prevent further escalation. Dennis Prager joined the discussion, emphasizing the historical context of leftist rhetoric and its potential to incite violence. He called for a recognition of the dangers posed by such language and the need for a moral stand against it. The guests concluded by expressing hope for a return to civility and a united front against the divisive forces in American politics. In summary, the attempted assassination of Donald Trump has sparked a national conversation about political violence, the role of rhetoric in inciting such acts, and the need for unity and accountability in American politics. The resilience shown by Trump and his supporters during the incident serves as a reminder of the stakes involved in the upcoming election and the importance of protecting democratic values.

The Rubin Report

'Real Time' Crowd Goes Quiet as Bill Maher & Ben Shapiro Have a Tense Exchange About Charlie Kirk
Guests: Ben Shapiro, Charlie Kirk
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A somber week spirals into a national conversation about how words, ideas, and violence collide on campus, on television, and in the streets. Dave Rubin opens by sharing personal echoes from 9/11 and a recent period of intense public scrutiny, insisting the goal is to talk honestly while avoiding demonizing opponents. The episode centers on Charlie Kirk’s legacy, the shooting that ended his life, and the broader question of how free speech, debate, and media coverage shape national tensions. Rubin plans a dialogue about Bill Maher’s Real Time exchange and what it reveals about civil discourse. From there, the conversation pivots to the ethics of labeling political rivals as Hitler and the danger of turning rhetoric into real violence. Maher argues free expression depends on not inflaming audiences, while Ben Shapiro pushes back that a culture of dehumanizing opponents can invite harm. They note the shooter’s reported left-leaning ties and a transgender partner, and discuss how online rumor, media framing, and crowd sentiment feed a volatile environment. The segment also cites Charlie Kirk’s own warning about an assassination culture spreading on the left. Attention then shifts to developments around the shooter, Tyler Robinson, including FBI releases and contemporaneous reporting that connected him to a transgender partner and to Discord conversations after the incident. The program notes that investigators interviewed Robinson’s roommate, and that the partner was transitioning from male to female. It also highlights broader questions about how campus and media institutions respond to violence, including remarks at UCLA by a race and equity director who celebrated Charlie’s death and the Oxford Union president-elect who endorsed violence as a tactic, sparking debate about free speech and accountability. Rubin closes by tracing a through-line from Charlie Kirk’s approach—engaging respectfully with opponents to illuminate truths—to a national moment where memorials and honors are proposed as a way to carry forward his mission. Erica Kirk’s emotional tribute recalls the personal cost of public conflict, while talk of a Presidential Medal of Freedom for Charlie and a large posthumous rally signals a country seeking unity through shared patriotism and faith. The host and guest reflect on the need to preserve American freedoms, even as partisan wounds linger, and to keep dialogue alive.
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