There Are No Girls on the Internet - Charlie Kirk’s Legacy Is Being Rewritten. Remember Who He Was.
Episode Date: September 13, 2025Charlie Kirk built his career by debating students and spreading rhetoric that was too often dismissed as “spirited debate.” Now, in the wake of his death, politicians and media outl...ets are rushing to rewrite his legacy. In this episode, Bridget digs into what Kirk really stood for, why his words mattered, and why violence doesn’t erase bigotry.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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I'm Bridget Todd, and this is There Are No Girls on the Internet.
Hello. So if I sound a little bit out of it, it's because it's been a very long week. I suspect that is probably true for you, wherever you're listening. I think we could all use a week where things just feel a little bit normal. I'm not even asking for good. Frankly, I'm just asking for normal. But that week is not this week. So I wanted to talk a little bit about what is going on with Charlie Kirk. So I'll tell you the broad.
strokes of what's happening, and then I want to get into my main point, which is what the reaction
has been like and what I think it says about where we're at as a culture. So in case you've
not heard, this week, 31-year-old conservative right-wing activist Charlie Kirk, huge Trump
ally was shot and killed during a campus debate at Utah Valley University in Utah. Law enforcement
initially released some pretty unhelpful videos and images of a suspect.
But because notably, everybody who might have known what they're doing at the FBI was systematically pushed out of the FBI.
People like Matab Sayyed, who was pushed out of the Utah FBI in July because she was not a good fit,
along with a bunch of other FBI officials as part of a purge.
Because of all that, the FBI and law enforcement in Utah were basically like, yeah, we have no leads whatsoever.
We have no helpful information.
We're just looking for a white guy in Utah, which, yeah, if you've been to Utah, not the most helpful.
Just this morning, as I was sitting down to record, I saw news that they do have the suspect in custody.
Our FBI director, Cash Patel, attended a press conference but did not speak.
Frankly, he just looked very much in over his head.
There is this video I saw of him kind of silently skulking around the sidelines of the press conference.
And I almost thought, you know, even if you don't really know what you're doing or you're overwhelmed,
you could always just thank people for their hard work.
Call out some names.
That's always a good thing to do at a press conference if you don't know what else.
to say. I'll put the video of him and the show notes, but I know that look. It is the look of somebody
who was in way over their head. Honestly, it is the look of a podcaster who was just put in charge
of a very high-profile murder investigation. Honestly, I would probably have the same look. None of the
officials took questions. The whole thing just did not inspire confidence. Patel also was posting
updates on social media that that ended up being wrong. At first, they said that he had apprehended
a suspect, but then that was a mistake and that man had been released. And then Patel said,
the investigation was ongoing. So if you listen to the episode that we did with our producer,
Joey Pat, about how trans folks are baselessly blamed for instances of violence. That is absolutely
what happened in this situation. I just took a search on Twitter and it is filled with verified
blue check accounts sharing images of people that they, one, say are trans and two, have been
named as the suspect, just like clockwork. It should go without saying that none of that is true.
Early reports from the Wall Street Journal indicated that ammunition was found inscribed with, quote, transgender and anti-fascist ideology.
And I was thinking, what the hell does transgender and anti-fascist ideology mean?
The transjournalist association helpfully cautioned against media outlets repeating this without actually knowing more and just generally reminded that, quote,
transgender ideology is a term coined for and used in anti-trans political messaging to falsely equate identity with politics.
which is a way to frame trans identity as a political choice rather than an innate identity,
as it is often unclear what actions or political positions the phrases actually refer to,
not unlike how the homosexual agenda is an amorphous term that has no real definition.
Reporters, they said, should be careful about using this term.
It is exclusively used to attack a minority group for political gain.
So the Wall Street Journal said that this ammunition had transgendered anti-fascist ideology written on it,
But soon thereafter, the New York Times reported that a senior law enforcement official with direct knowledge of the investigation cautioned that those reports had not been verified by ATF analysis and did not match other summaries of the evidence and might turn out to have been misread or misinterpreted.
And then just a few hours later, the Wall Street Journal walked back that story, stopping just short of a retraction.
And what is so annoying about that is that it was already posted everywhere, headline after headline that trans ideology was found written on the ammunition.
but I have seen a lot less reporting of the fact that Wall Street Journal has now clarified
that these are just preliminary reports and cautioned folks against taking them at face value.
And that makes sense because we now know there was no trans ideology written on that ammunition.
People spent however long demonizing trans folks for no reason and lying about trans folks for no reason
and did not even follow back up with the correct information.
So let's talk about how people are responding.
to this murder.
I obviously am not supportive of violence.
Frankly, I think this is a really dangerous development,
which could likely lead to more violence
and further increase the fear
that so many trans and queer and marginalized people
are already living with every goddamn day.
So that is where I stand.
But I also need to make clear
that there is a world of difference
between cheering violence against somebody
and completely lying about
and whitewashing somebody's entire career,
what they did, what they said,
and what they actually stood for.
And I feel like I am losing my goddamn mind
watching people do that this week.
We do not have to make Charlie Kirk
into a hero or a martyr
to wish his family well
or to express condolences to his wife and kids.
We do not have to divorce Charlie Kirk
from what it was he was doing
and literally, quite literally,
the things that he was saying when he was killed.
We can actually tell the truth about those things.
I almost think that we have gotten to a point
where that if you just read,
Charlie Kirk's actual recent words in public that he said, you would be told that you were being
disrespectful to the dead. Because you'll notice that nobody is actually pointing to any words or
quotes or videos of him saying things that they found profound or whatever after his death.
Frigin Kristen Chenowis from Wicked posted, quote, I'm so upset. I didn't always agree, but
I appreciated some perspectives. And I would absolutely love to know which perspectives
specifically she appreciated from Charlie Kirk. Online, they are comparing Charlie Kirk to Martin Luther
King. I'm not kidding. Representative Anna Paulina Luna circulated a draft letter asking for a statue of
Kirk to be placed in the U.S. Capitol. Representative Andrew Clyde supported that saying,
quote, we have a statue of MLK in the capital, don't we? Basically saying that Kirk and MLK should be
similarly honored. Mind you, this is how I know these people don't even know what they're talking about
and they don't even know what Kirk actually did or stood for or said or felt.
Because Charlie Kirk did not even like Martin Luther King.
This time last year, what was Charlie Kirk doing?
He said that he was going to start dedicating his podcast
to discrediting Martin Luther King's legacy.
So this just lets me understand that these people have no idea
about the actual attitudes and positions of the person
that they are lionizing in death.
The Trump administration ordered flags at half-mast around the country
at the Yankees game that did a tribute to Kirk.
There was a moment of silence.
at the NFL game. This, after all back hand-winging about not bringing politics into sports when people
were kneeling for the anthem, remember that? So Charlie Kirk was a private citizen, a podcaster who did not
have any role within the administration or in government, and yet his body was transported on Air Force 2
with the vice president at taxpayer expense. And I think that there is something about the way the
internet is reacting to this, the speed and the scale of the reaction, the lionization, the spectacle,
that has truly broken my brain and revealed to me that we genuinely are just living in a fractured reality.
Because we have people lionizing Charlie Kirk in this way that I simply do not understand.
Like genuinely, if you knew about Charlie Kirk just at face value, stuff that he did, stuff that he said,
what his work actually looked like, they don't think people are actually grappling with Charlie Kirk who he was, what he did, what he said, what his work actually looked like.
to the point where, listen, I don't like Charlie Kirk,
but it almost feels disrespectful to the man's work and life and legacy
to completely ignore the work that I suspect he was quite proud of.
Like in a weird kind of roundabout way,
I feel like people who are telling the truth about the work that he did
are being more respectful of him
because they're actually telling the truth about the stuff that he spent his life doing.
And I think that's why you might see like your normie aunt or something on Facebook
being like, oh, what a nice young man.
It's so sad that he was killed.
And I think the reason is that he was young, he had a wife and kids.
And I think that it's easy for people to say, oh, he just was someone who cared about
scripture and the Bible and Christianity.
Like I've seen people talk about Charlie Kirk like he was more or less a neutral figure
who just traveled around to colleges to teach young students about the power and importance
of civil debate and discourse, which is so far removed from reality that I simply cannot
let it stand.
I saw somebody say, oh, he would go into these hotbeds of liberal campuses only armed with a Bible and a microphone.
And I think if that's genuinely all you know about this person, I could maybe see why you would get into a situation where you're lionizing them because you really don't know what it was that person actually did or actually stood for.
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And we're back.
The first thing people really need to understand about Charlie Kirk is that he wasn't just
a podcaster who said mean things into a microphone for lots and lots of money, although
he did a lot of that.
He wasn't just some shock jock radio DJ.
His work caused actual harm to people.
Just take a look at his work with Turning Points USA.
So in November 2016, Charlie Kirk's organization Turning Points USA launched.
what they called the professor watch list.
The initiative aimed to, quote, expose and document college professors who discriminate against
conservative students at advanced leftist propaganda in the classroom.
The watch list functioned as an online database featuring names, pictures, and accusations
against professors that Kirk and his followers do not like.
The list is still up.
These allegations often stem from student complaints, media reports, or cherry-picked selective
quotes.
Once listed, professors face harassment campaigns and, quote,
including hate mail, doxing, and threats.
Y'all, I know real people in my life,
academics, speakers, and writers
who were threatened, silenced, and harassed
because of this list.
Here's just a sampling.
George Stuccarellio Mayor,
a political science professor
formerly at Drexel University,
was added to the watch list
after satirical tweets,
critical of white supremacy,
including a viral post that read,
All I want for Christmas is white genocide.
Now, he told the Washington Post
that the tweet was meant to be satirical,
poking fun at this idea of white genocide as, quote, an imaginary concept used by the far right to scare people.
But that got him added to this list, and after he was included on it, he reported an avalanche of violent threats leading to his eventual resignation in 2017.
After a year of harassment by right-wing, white supremacist media outlets and internet mobs, after death threats and threats of violence directed at me and my family,
my situation has become unsustainable, he wrote in a statement on Facebook.
There's also Tommy Curry, a black velocity professor, formerly.
at Texas A&M University, who specialized in race theory.
In an episode of a radio show, Curry, who was supportive of gun ownership, was talking about
the Quentin Tarantino movie Django Unchained.
If you haven't seen that movie, it's a formerly enslaved person gets revenge on his enslaver.
The Guardian reports that he talked about how uneasy white people are with the idea of black
people talking about gun ownership and using them to combat racist forces.
But when a recording of the talk we surfaced, people thought that he was telling black people
to kill white people.
This idea, the Guardian reports, swept through conservative media and into the fever swamps of
Reddit forums and racist message boards and the threats followed.
So that particular instance did not start on the professor watch list, but the watch list
amplified it and Curry faced sustained harassment and death threats.
Robin DiAngelo, best known for her book, White Vigility, was included on the watch list
for promoting, quote, anti-white bias in her scholarship and teachings on systemic racism.
And I think that her case really illustrates what the watch list is really about.
which is punishing and silencing scholarship that names and calls out and critiques inequality.
Same thing with Keanga Yamada Taylor at Princeton University,
a leading black feminist scholar who writes about race and housing inequality.
She was added to the professor watch list after criticizing Trump in a commencement speech
and basically had to pull out of her public appearances afterward because of public threats.
In the wake of Charlie Kirk's death, Professor Stacey Patton,
another black woman professor targeted by Kirk for harassment had this to say on Facebook.
It is a little long, but I do think people should hear what she had to say.
And just a heads up that her post includes some slurs, and you will hear those in this segment.
She says, I am on Charlie Kirk's hit list.
His so-called professor watch list, run under the umbrella of Turning Points USA,
is nothing more than a digital hit list for academics who dare speak truth to power.
I landed there in 2024 after writing commentary that inflamed the MAGA faithful,
and once my name went up, the harassment machine roared to life. For weeks, my inbox and voicemail were deluged. Mostly white men spit venom at me through the phone. Bitch, cunt, nigger. They threatened all manner of violence. They overwhelmed the university's PR lines and the president's office with calls demanding that I be fired. The flood was so relentless that the head of campus security reached out to offer me an escort because they feared one of these keyboard soldiers might step out of his basement and do me harm.
I am not unique. Kirk's watch list has terrorized lesions of professors across this country.
Women, black faculty, queer scholars, basically anyone who challenged white supremacy,
gun culture, or Christian nationalism, suddenly found themselves the target of coordinated abuse.
Some received threats. Some have their jobs threatened. Some left academia entirely.
Kirk sent the loud message to us. Speak the truth and we will unleash the mob.
That is the culture of violence that Charlie Kirk built. He normalized violence.
He curated it, monetized it, and sicked it on anyone who dared puncture his movement's lies.
And now, in the wake of his shooting, there is all this national outpouring of mourning of mourning,
moments of silence, yellow prayer hands, and tribute to painting him as a civil debater.
But the truth is, Kirk and his foot soldiers spent years terrorizing educators trying to silence us with harassment and fear.
And now the same violence he unleashed on others has come full circle.
But what I find especially jarring is the dissidents in public mourning for a smug white man whose life work was actively high.
hostile to certain groups. Kirk spent years demonizing LGBTQ people, mocking gun survivors, spewing
racism about black folks, and pushing policies that literally shorten lives. It is so revolting to watch
a bipartisan wave of grief sweep over this hateful racist as if he was a neutral community servant.
So I wanted to share what Professor Patton is saying here because I think that we are seeing this
culture that is demanding people who were personally targeted by this person and personally
targeted by the culture this person designed and built up, we are seeing systems demand that
those same people who were targeted now mourn for this person, now hold space for this person,
now not speak up about what they experienced about this person and what they experienced
at this person's hands. And Professor Patton is not alone. 404 reports that the American
Association of University Professors wrote in an open letter in 2017 that the professor watch list
lists names of professors with their institutional affiliations, photographs,
thereby making it easy for would-be stalkers and cyber bullies to target them.
Individual faculty members, who have been included on such lists,
singled out elsewhere, have been subject to threats of violence,
including sexual assault through hundreds of emails, calls, and social media postings.
Such threatening messages are likely to stifle the free expression of the targeted faculty member.
Further, the publicity that such cases attract can cause others to self-censor
so as to avoid being subject to similar treatment.
Campus Free Speech Rights Group Fire found that censorship and punishment of professors
skyrocketed between 2020 and 2023, in part because of efforts of the Professor Watch List.
So we need to really keep it real that the Professor Watch List is not just a catalog of liberal professors.
It is a tool designed to intimidate and silence people who challenged entrenched power structures
by disproportionately targeting marginalized scholars, trans and queer scholars, black women,
and anybody who did work around inequality and critical voices,
it really underscores the stakes of this never-ending harassment campaign
that people like Kirk disingenuously call the free speech debate.
It is not about protecting open inquiry, but about suppressing dissent pretty clearly.
And it's all about silencing critics of the right.
And Charlie Kirk got to do this work of subcommittee.
silencing people and bullying people into silence and making people fear for their lives for what they said,
while simultaneously branding himself a warrior and protector of free speech on college campuses.
While he himself was going to college campuses to get paid big money for talking about how black women like me
lacked the brain processing power to be taken seriously.
But now they're coming out and they're saying it for us.
They're coming out and they're saying,
I'm only here because of affirmative action.
Yeah, we know.
You do not have the brain processing power to otherwise be taken really seriously.
You had to go steal a white person slot to go be taken somewhat seriously.
Charlie Kirk's whole thing was about setting a double standard
where he got to say whatever he wanted and his opponents were forced into silence.
Like, I get to say whatever I want and it's free speech,
but if you've been anything to say about it, you'll wind up on my watch list for it and get fired.
And it's the exact same culture that we're contending with right now,
where Charlie Kirk openly talked about how he hated empathy,
and yet anybody who is deemed not being empathetic enough about Kirk's death
winds up on a list, literally.
Wired has a great piece called right-wing activists
are targeting people for allegedly celebrating Charlie Kirk's death
all about how far-right influencers and violent extremists
are posting, identifying details about people that they view
as celebrating or glorifying Charlie Kirk's death.
The campaign has been swift and widespread,
and has already led to at least one person losing their job and others receiving death threats.
There is already a website, charliemurters.com, that Wired Reports is a, quote, central hub of
this activity, which was registered in the early evening on the day Kirk was shot and is revealing
certain personal information such as social media usernames and email addresses of individuals
that the operators believe were celebrating his horrific murder.
One of the first names on the list is journalist Rachel Gilmore.
She posted that she was terrified to think of how far-right fans of Kirk, aching for more violence, could very well turn this into an even more radicalizing moment.
Will they now believe their fears have been proven right and feel they have to retaliate, regardless of who actually was behind the initial shooting?
So after she was put on this list, she told Wired that the website has made her genuinely afraid for her safety.
I feel awful for anyone whose name was on it.
It's clear that purpose of the website is to do exactly with the post that landed me on there, warned,
supporters might want to do, retaliate. And obviously, she is not wrong. Rachel got death threats
and rape threats and DMs from people promising to find out where she lives. And importantly,
wired reports that just like Rachel, a lot of the people who got on that list did not glorify
violence or really even celebrate Kirk's death. Some of the posts are just apathetic tweets,
things like posting the news of Kirk's death and writing, and the world keeps spitting. But that appellate
not even outright celebrating or condoning or glorifying his death
was enough for them to be included on this list.
Libs of TikTok's Chaya Raychick highlighted that the assistant dean at the Office of Student Care and Conduct
at Middle Tennessee State University wrote on her Facebook page that she had zero sympathy for Charlie Kirk,
and she was fired within hours.
The university put up a statement saying,
an MTSU employee today offered inappropriate and callous comments on social media
concerning the horrific and tragic murder of Charlie Kirk.
The comments by this employee who worked in a position of trust directly with students were inconsistent with our values and have undermined the university's credibility and reputation with our students, faculty, staff, and community at large.
This employee has been fired effective immediately.
Variety even reported that Comcast, the parent company of NBC, MSNBC, Bravo, etc.
sent out an all-staff memo warning staffers not to say the wrong thing about Charlie Kirk.
So this was after MSNBC swiftly fired Matthew Dow,
who had been working as an MSNBC contributor
after he said on air that Kirk was a divisive figure
who pushed hate speech.
The Comcast memo said that that coverage
was at odds with fostering civil dialogue
and being willing to listen to the points of view
of those who have differing opinions.
We should be able to disagree robustly and passionately,
but ultimately with respect, we need to do better.
So you really see how mainstream media
is doing the work of whitewashing Kirk's actual words and attitudes
and also setting the agenda
that's stepping out of the norm of how people
deciding to talk about that in his death will not be tolerated.
It doesn't stop there because Louisiana representative Clay Higgins says that he's going
to seek to have social media companies place lifetime bans on users that he deems as having
glorified or celebrated the murder of Charlie Kirk.
He says, I'm going to use congressional authority and every influence with big tech platforms
to mandate immediate ban for life of every post or commenter that belittled the assassination
of Charlie Kirk.
Mind you, this is the same representative.
Clay Higgins, who threatened to put Twitter executives in prison because of what he's claimed
was unfair censorship of content about Hunter Biden's laptop. So we again see the double standard
where censorship of me is bad, but censorship of my opponents is virtuous and patriotic.
There is no principle here other than oppression. So Higgins continued, if they ran their mouth
with their smart-ass hatred celebrating the heinous murder of that beautiful young man who
dedicated his whole life to delivering respectful, conservative truth into the hearts of liberal
enclave universities, armed only with a Bible and a microphone and a constitution, those profiles
must come down. He said he plans to lobby big tech to have zero tolerance for violent political
hate content. I'm also going after their business licenses and permitting. Their businesses will be
blacklisted aggressively. They should be kicked out of every school and their driver's license
should be revoked, he added. I'm basically going to cancel with extreme prejudice these evil, sick
animals who celebrated Charlie Kirk's assassination.
I'm starting that today.
That is all.
More after a quick break.
Another podcast from some SNL late-night comedy guide.
Not quite.
Unhumor me with Robert Smygel and friends.
Me and hilarious guests from Jim Gaffigan to Bob Odenkirk to David Letterman,
help make you funnier.
This week, my guest, SNL's Mikey Day and head writer Streeter Seidel,
help an a cappella band with their between songs banter.
Who's the worst singer in the group?
The worst?
Yeah.
Me.
Is there anything to the idea that because you're from Harvard,
you only got in because your parents made a huge donation.
The group.
The yard birds, right?
That's the name.
The Harvard yard, but they're open.
Do you have a name suggestion?
We're open.
Since you guys are middle-aged, one erection.
Listen to humor me with Robert Smigel and Friends on the I-Heart Radio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcast.
Huber me.
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What's up, fam? It's Isaiah Thomas. And I'm C.J. Toledano, and our podcast, Point Game is about
defying the odds. Like LeBron heading into the playoffs without Luca and Austin Reed.
And finding ways to win no matter what. He's the smartest player to ever play the game.
His IQ is at a level that we've never seen before. And he knows. Without Luca and Austin
Reeves, I got to manipulate the game. We get a player's perspective on the challenges of the
playoffs. I think Joker's going to be exhausted this series because when they don't have Rudy in the
lineup, he has to really guard guys like Nas Reid. He has to guard Julius Randall. And then he has
to give us everything he gives us on the night-to-night basis on offense. And when IT's friends stop by,
like Quentin Richardson, we dive into some playoff history too. Steve Nash will get that thing.
That man, hell get to fly. He running up the court, licking his fingers why he got the bar. Like,
after you go through a training camp with that, Isaiah, you figure,
it out real quick.
Get your ass up and down the court, and you're going to get the ball.
So listen to Point Game on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your
podcasts.
Will Farrell's Big Money Players and IHeart Podcasts presents soccer moms.
So I'm Leanne.
Yeah.
This is my best friend, Janet.
Hey.
And we have been joined at the hips since high school.
Absolutely.
Now a redacted amount of years later, we're still joined at the hip, just a little bit bigger
hips, wider.
This is a podcast.
We're recording it as we tailgate our youth soccer games in the back of my high
Honda Odyssey with all the snacks and drink.
Sidebar.
Why did you get hard seltzer instead of beer?
They had a bogo.
Well, then you got it.
Do you want a white collar or something here?
Just hit it.
What are y'all doing?
Microphones?
Are you making a rap album?
Oh, I would.
Come on.
Can you believe?
I would buy it.
Cuts through the defense like a hot knife through sponge cake.
That sounds delicious.
Oh, you're lucky.
I'm not a drug addict.
You are.
You are.
I'm not an alcoholic.
You are.
You are.
I'm not a killer.
I love this team.
and I'm really trying to be a figure in their lives that they can rely on.
Oh.
Listen to Soccer Moms on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Let's get right back into it.
The Trump administration warned that they could even look at revoking existing visas
or denying them to applicants if they were deemed to have been making light of Charlie Kirk's death.
Deputy Secretary of State Christopher Landau posted on X saying,
that he's directed consular officials to undertake appropriate action, saying,
I've been disgusted to see some on social media praising, rationalizing, or making light of the
event, and have directed our consular officials to undertake appropriate action.
Please feel free to bring such comments by foreigners to my attention so that the State Department
can protect the American people.
Like, protect the American people from what, expressing apathy about a podcaster you all liked?
Now, keep in mind that as of recording this on September 12th, we do not yet know much about the
suspect's motive. Stuff is starting to trickle in. But that has not stopped right-wing figures from
essentially using Kirk's death to call for war and retribution, I guess, against leftists or liberals or
Democrats or queer folks or trans folks or people of color, or anybody they've decided is against
them because they are not white, straight men pushing that party line. The Congressional Black
Caucus is calling for an investigation after a spate of bomb threats at historically black
colleges and universities, which just makes me wonder since the suspect
is white and Charlie Kirk is white, and it happened in a mostly white state. Like, why are we in it?
But you know what? I don't even really have to ask because I know why. This is a war. This is a war,
said Alex Jones. Steve Bannon said, we have to have steely resolve. Charlie Kirk is a casualty of war.
We are at war in this country. We are. And of course, our old pal Elon Musk had this to say.
If they won't leave us in peace, then our choice is to fight or die. You probably saw Trump's weird,
probably AI video where he said,
for years, those on the radical left
have compared wonderful Americans like Charlie to Nazis
and the world's worst mass murderers and criminals.
This kind of rhetoric is directly responsible
for the terrorism that we're seeing in the country today.
What's also so wild to me about this
is the fact that the left,
save for some like random people on social media,
have all condemned what happened to Charlie Kirk.
They are not celebrating it.
But that's the thing.
It genuinely does not matter,
really what is said or what even really happened, actually. What matters is this big narrative that is
clearly being weaponized. His death is being turned into a tool, a way to justify harassment and threats
and censorship of anybody who disagrees. The content of our words, what we actually say, the nuance of our
positions, none of that seems to matter anymore. What matters is that we are targets for simply existing
in a world where we don't really want to make him a martyr or erase the reality of the things that he said and did.
It's also just a complete rewriting of history.
Currently, we do not know much about the motive,
but let's just say it was political violence.
How can you live in a country like the United States
and act like political violence just started this week
with the murder of Charlie Kirk?
It's like a far-right extremist never broke into Nancy Pelosi's home
and bashed her elderly husband's head in with a hammer.
And you know what people on the right did after that happened?
Donald Trump Jr. resounded with a tweet,
mocking the attack saying,
the internet remains undefeated,
basically implying the whole thing was a joke
rather than a serious assault on an elderly old man.
Elon Musk shared a link to a false report
claiming that Paul Pelosi was involved
in a romantic or sexual dispute
with a male sex worker,
a claim that has been thoroughly debunked,
and Clay Higgins, the representative from Louisiana
who said that we should have no tolerance
for political violence, amplified the same thing.
And you know what Charlie Kirk did after that happened?
He encouraged his audience to post
bail for Nancy Pelosi's husband's attacker, who he called a patriot. Or what about Melissa Hortman,
the Democratic lawmaker who was assassinated alongside her husband and dog just a few months ago?
Why didn't Trump order national flags at half-mast for her? Why no tributes at Yankees' games?
In a post after Kirk's death, Gavin Newsom said, the best way to honor Charlie's memory is to continue
his work, engage with each other across ideology, through spirited discourse. In a democracy,
the ideas are tested through words and good faith debate, never through violence.
Honest disagreement makes us stronger.
Violence only drives us apart and corrods the values at the heart of this nation.
But that is my thing.
Let's not pretend like Kirk's whole thing was on this disagreement.
It is just so insulting to call his brand of debate honest disagreement.
He didn't think women should work or vote.
When asked about whether or not black women could be pilots or doctors, he said,
and I quote, I don't want Laquisha James flying the plane or a black lesbian operating on me at the hospital.
How is that an honest disagreement?
Do we really need to treat this as spirited discourse and not what it is?
A refusal to see entire groups of people as fully human or capable.
Calling that debate doesn't just sanitize his rhetoric.
It erases the real harm that it causes and the dangerous worldview that it promotes.
And worse, it sets the people up that he targeted with this kind of rhetoric to just have to
swallow it and call it ice cream. I saw this post from a lawyer named Cheryl Weichel last night,
and I think it really makes the point well, open debate is for economic policy and whether we should
charge for public transportation. Open debate is not whether some human beings are lesser than
others. Like in Gavin Newsom's mind, how would I even debate that? How would I even have a spirited
discourse about whether or not I am a less than human being than somebody like Charlie Kirk because
I'm a black woman? And furthermore, I just have to push back on the idea that Newsome raises here that I've
scene repeated, like it's repeated in the Ezra Klein piece called Charlie Kirk did politics the
right way, that basically posits that Kirk was good and virtuous because he was willing to engage in
debate. But set aside for a moment that always wanting to debate others isn't an inherently
moral or virtuous stance. And like the most annoying people you know probably are like, oh, I love to
debate. But also, Charlie Kirk was a grown man whose bread and butter was going to college campuses
and debating students, teenagers, that's what he was doing in Utah.
His whole thing was not standing toe to toe with experts or peers
or people with the same access and resources he had.
He built his brand on picking fights with kids who are still figuring out who they were
and parading those interactions online as if he had scored some great intellectual victory
to personally enrich himself.
Why do we then have to pretend that that is moral and noble?
And that's why I think this moment is such a dizzying one,
for me. I know I've been all over the place in this conversation because genuinely I'm,
something is broken inside of me. I think we're seeing all these people and institutions
lionizing Kirk, and I'm not even saying that they shouldn't mourn if that's what they feel they have to do,
but lionizing him and whitewashing his hateful rhetoric and reckless tactics that hurt people
really makes clear how much these mainstream institutions were not really put off by the kind
of life that he actually lived and the kinds of things that he actually said and stood for.
And it's a reminder that these systems around us will always celebrate power and spectacle and influence over accountability and that they will reward people who harm others if they do it loudly enough or strategically enough or they do it while they're like young and have kids in a family.
But for the rest of us, the ones who, I don't know, want to call out harm or inequality, it feels like the rules are entirely different.
You know, these are the same people that have spent the last decade saying, fuck your feelings as a rally and cry.
and I saw a great tweet that put it very well that said,
no, no, no, no, no, no, you misunderstood.
I said, fuck your feelings.
My feelings are very important and must be handled gently,
like a tiny baby hummingbird.
And that is exactly what's going on here, I think.
It's fuck our feelings,
but their feelings have to be treated with respect or else.
Our deaths are political.
Theirs are national tragedies.
It's their free speech rights to say whatever they want about us,
but if we verbalize a problem with it,
we end up on a list.
our heroes will be removed from history books on government websites,
but we will be forced to mourn their heroes or else.
As I'm recording this, the police have just announced
that they have an alleged shooter in custody.
So far, all I know right now is that he's a young man who lives in Utah,
not far from campus.
And he was turned in by his father after he confessed.
So the FBI, it sounds like, did not really play a huge role here.
I'm sure that we will learn more,
but as of right now, we don't know a ton.
We don't know why he pulled the trigger
or even if it was really him.
And I just have to say that this is one of those times
that I genuinely fear
that our country is heading down
an increasingly violent path.
And this feels like another big step
in that violent direction.
The way that people so quickly galvanized
around lionizing Charlie Kirk,
lying about Charlie Kirk,
using his death as a way to bash trans people
and further target and surveil and harassed them,
use their death to call for war, all of that.
It just really, I'm,
quite unnerved in this moment. And now that we know that the killer is a white guy from a Republican
family, we're watching so many people who were talking tough about wanting to start a war with the
left and trans people and this and that and Democrats, basically walk that back without any kind of
public accountability of why they rush to say stuff like that when we didn't know anything about
what happened yet. For all the hand-wringing about trans people, the suspect is a white guy from a
Republican family. So we're already seeing how those same voices who were calling for blood
when they suspected the suspect could have been a trans person have now totally changed their tune.
Here's what Nancy May said before we knew any information about the killer whatsoever.
Is there a problem with political violence across the spectrum?
Yeah, we're talking about Charlie Kirk right now. That's the subject of this that we're talking about
right now. Democrats own this 100%. And now that it turns out the killer is a white guy from a
Republican family, she says, we all know Charlie Kirk would want us to pray for such an evil and lost
individual like Tyler Robinson to find Jesus Christ. We will do the same. And I say all of this to say
that we can condemn violence. We can condemn what happened to Charlie Kirk without rewriting the record
of who Kirk was or what he actually stood for because violence does not wash hate clean. It does not
make bigotry noble. It does not turn cruelty into courage. We have a public record of the things
that Kirk stood for, the things that he said, the things that he did. We don't have to forget all of that
because it makes it easier for the powers that be. I want to close with the words of poet Lucille Clifton.
They ask me to remember, but they want me to remember their memories, and I keep on remembering mine.
We do have a news roundup for you all featuring a very cool guest co-host, Ashley Ray, of the podcast
TV, I say. It's a fun one. I promise. You will hear that next week, so please stick around. Thanks so much for
listening. Got a story about an interesting thing in tech or just want to say hi? You can reach us at hello at tangoody.com.
You can also find transcripts for today's episode at tangoody. There are no girls on the internet was
created by me, Bridget Todd. It's a production of IHeart Radio and unbossed creative. Jonathan Strickland
is our executive producer. Tari Harrison is our producer and sound engineer. Michael Amato is our
contributing producer. Edited by Joey Pat.
I'm your host, Bridget Todd.
If you want to help us grow,
rate and review us on Apple Podcasts.
For more podcasts from IHeartRadio,
check out the IHeart Radio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Another podcast from some SNL, late-night comedy guy,
not quite.
Unhumor me with Robert Smigel and Friends.
Me and hilarious guests from Bob Odenkirk to David Letterman
help make you funnier.
This week, my guest,
SNL's Mikey Day and head writer Streeter Seidel
help an a cappella band
with their between songs banter.
Where does it?
your group perform. We do some retirement homes. Those people are starving for banter.
Listen to humor me with Robert Smigel and friends on the I-HeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever
you get your podcasts. I'm Joey Dardano. And on my new podcast, Hope from a Hypocrite, I'll be changing
lives, helping people in need with thoughtful solutions. Psych, I'm a comedian. I'm not qualified
to give good advice. Join me and my comedian friends as we riff, rant, recommend some of the most
legally dubious advice known to me.
This is Help from a Hypocrite,
the worst advice from the dumbest people you know.
Listen to Help from a Hypocrite Wednesdays
on the Iheart radio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
What's up, fam? It's Isaiah Thomas.
And I'm C.J. Toledano.
It's our favorite time of the year on our podcast point game, the playoffs.
We're digging into the biggest surprises of the season,
and I'm looking back on some of my greatest playoff moments.
If we didn't talk ever again, I was crying.
You just understood.
That's how personal it got.
Wow.
Then after that game seven, Marquis coming to you, he's like, you know I love you, dog.
You know, it's all love.
This was just playoffs.
This was just basketball.
So listen to Point Game on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hey, I'm Deanna Maria Riva, and on my new podcast, How Hard Can It Be?
I call on my Gen X squad from Ohio to Hollywood as we navigate Midlife's most fantastic BS.
Unfiltered conversations from night sweats to futas to scheduling sacks.
Wait.
What sex?
Is it just me or does every woman my age want to look at Pinterest instead of having sex sometimes?
They say we can't polish a turd, but we're sure going to try.
So let's get blunt with laughs, tears, or tears of laughter.
Listen to How Hard Can It Be with Diana Maria Riva on the IHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
This is an IHeart podcast.
Guaranteed human.
