Charlie Kirk was only 31 years old when he was cut down by an assassin’s bullet while speaking at Utah Valley University. A husband, father, voice for freedom and unapologetic defender of Western values, he was murdered in cold blood—his life stolen not because of anything he did wrong, but because of what he stood for.
His killing was not just the silencing of a man. It was an attack on the principles that bind free nations together: faith, courage and the determination to speak the truth, even when it is unpopular.
Utah Gov. Spencer Cox immediately called it what it was: a political assassination. And for anyone who has followed the rising tide of hatred against conservatives, Christians and defenders of Western civilization, the intent is all too clear. Kirk was targeted because he re