Charlie Kirk's Death: A Revolutionary's Clap Back!
- Arinze Ture
- Sep 16
- 3 min read

The following quotes are from the racist, misogynist, ignorant, and hateful Charlie Kirk.
"We must also be real. We must be honest with the population. Having an armed citizenry comes with a price, and that is part of liberty... We need to be very clear that you're not going to get gun deaths to zero. It will not happen. But I think it's worth it. I think it's worth to have a cost of, unfortunately, some gun deaths every single year, so that we can have the Second Amendment."
"I can't stand the word empathy, actually," he said. "I think empathy is a made-up, new age term that does a lot of damage."
Kirk insisted Black people were "better" in the 1940s under Jim Crow laws. While debating a college student, Kirk said, "They were actually better in the 1940s. It was bad. It was evil. But what happened? Something changed. They committed less crimes." The person he debated responded, "4,000 Black men, women, and children were killed in violent lynch mobs. Racial terror permeated American culture for hundreds of years. You don't think that affected the generational psyche of an entire group of people?" Kirk responded "Black America is worse than it has been in the last 80 years."
On his radio show, Kirk not only said that Joy Reid, Michelle Obama, Sheila Jackson Lee, and Ketanji Brown Jackson are "affirmative action picks" He also said Black women "do not have the brain processing power to otherwise be taken really seriously. You had to go steal a white person's slot to go be taken somewhat seriously."
"If I see a Black pilot, I'm going to be like, 'Boy, I hope he's qualified.'"
Kirk repeatedly spread misinformation surrounding the death of George Floyd, who experts say died from an officer applying his knee to Floyd’s neck. Instead, Kirk, who is not a medical examiner and did not examine Floyd's body, said his death was caused by "overdose."
“Martin Luther King was awful. He's not a good person.”
"We made a huge mistake when we passed the Civil Rights Act in the 1960’s”.
The aforementioned quotes from Charlie Kirk speak to his character, conscience, and contempt for Black people while he was living. Therefore, his death does not cleanse him of these despicable attributes.
I am a Revolutionary. My clap back to the death of Charlie Kirk is this. Medgar Evers, Anna Mae Aquash, Malcolm X, Mary Turner, Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., Patrice Lumumba, Thomas Sankara, Adlena Hamlett, Amilcar Cabral, Steve Biko, Fred Hampton, Mark Clark, Bobby Hutton, Dr. Huey P. Newton, Samora Machal, Harriet Moore, Birdia Keglar, Che Guevara, Walter Rodney, and Maurice Bishop were martyrs who spent their lives in the service of humanity as a result of their struggle to uplift the disinherited, downtrodden, and disenfranchised in the societies in which they lived. These outstanding examples of humanity, at its best, contributed their love, blood, and tireless pursuit of liberation which benefited all of humanity. Therefore, their deaths were correctly classified as assassinations.
On the other hand, Charlie Kirk was not a martyr. He sowed the seeds of hate, discord, discrimination, division, deception, White Supremacy, and the worst of humanity’s inhumanity. Therefore, via the existential reality of death that resulted from a gun homicide, Charlie Kirk experienced Karma. Now some say ‘Karma is a bitch.’ I say, ‘Oh no. Karma is a classy wise elder that will calmly sit you down and serve you a tea that you later realize was lazed with the same poison you served others for years.’
Brother Malcolm X summarizes my thoughts best regarding the death of Charlie Kirk when he stated “l don't think anybody here would deny that when you send chickens out in the morning from your barnyard, those chickens will return that evening to your barnyard, not your neighbor's barnyard. I think this is a prime example of the devil's chickens coming back home to roost. That the chickens that he sent out, the violence that he's perpetrated in other countries, here and abroad, four children in Birmingham, or Medgar Evers, or the mangrove in Africa. I think this same violence has come back to claim one of their own. Now, being an old farm boy myself, chickens coming home to roost never made me sad. ln fact, it's only made me glad.”
Marinate on that!
Ready For Revolution
All Power To The People!!!



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