The Death of Charlie Kirk and America’s Two Wars

14/09/2025 16 min

Listen "The Death of Charlie Kirk and America’s Two Wars"

Episode Synopsis

The rifle crack that killed Charlie Kirk in Utah was an earthquake. He collapsed with a wound to the neck, was rushed to a hospital, and pronounced dead. But as with any quake, the most dangerous part isn’t the first tremor. It’s the aftershocks — the cheers, denunciations, and cries of martyrdom — that destabilize what remains.The quake itself is clear: a man shot from a rooftop. The aftershocks are harder. They reveal that America is split not just by politics but by two different realities.On the left, war is material. Activists talk about oligarchs, billionaires, oppression, and identity. The phrase “words are violence” reflects the belief that hate speech or misgendering can wound like blows. That’s why many celebrated Kirk’s death: not as cosmic justice, but as one more fascist gone, history pushing forward.On the right, war is spiritual. For Kirk’s evangelical base, this was not politics but cosmic combat. The shooter was a vessel of the Enemy — in Christian vocabulary, Satan. Kirk’s death is framed as martyrdom.But martyrdom shifts meaning across traditions. In Christianity, a martyr (martys, “witness”) endures death without renouncing faith: John the Baptist beheaded, Jesus crucified, apostles tortured. Martyrdom is witness, not suicide. In Islam, martyrdom (shahid) also means witness, often extending to those who die in jihad — even suicide bombers in extremist usage. In revolutionary politics, martyrdom is memory: fallen fighters fuel the cause, but there’s no heaven, only history.So Kirk becomes what you already believed: demagogue, casualty, or witness to truth.The word sin deepens the rift. Christians call everyone sinners — “all have sinned and fall short of the glory of God.” To them, it’s solidarity. To outsiders, it sounds like disgust. If your identity — gay, trans, poly — is central to who you are, being told it is sin feels like annihilation. Christians believe they’re offering diagnosis and hope. Nonbelievers hear condemnation.That explains the venom online. For ex-evangelicals, “sin” reopens old wounds. Kirk’s death felt like justice. And to evangelicals, that rage confirms their belief: demons shriek when exposed.The Catholic Church complicates it further. Pope Francis offers blessings and softer words, but the sacraments remain strict. Communion requires confession and absolution. Divorce without annulment or living in “grave sin” bars you from the Eucharist. To Catholics, this is consistency. To outsiders, it’s a tease: welcomed in, denied at the table.Some argue Kirk’s death cripples his movement. History suggests the opposite. Martyrdom rarely kills movements. Kill Jesus, the Church spreads. Kill apostles, saints multiply. Martyrdom fertilizes. MAGA is not a cult of one man. It is a hydra: Trump, Kirk, Carlson, RFK — chop off a head, more sprout. Millions of believers see demons behind the celebration of Kirk’s killing. Online glee looks to them like possession — like The Exorcist on the Georgetown steps.This is why comparing today to Spain in 1936 — fascists vs. communists — misses the point. That was a material war. Today, one side fights oppression and billionaires. The other believes it is fighting Satan himself.That’s why Kirk’s assassination will not silence his cause. To some he was a demagogue, to others a martyr. And in the Christian story, martyrdom is never the end. It is the engine of new beginnings.The earthquake was a sniper’s shot. The aftershocks are the wars of meaning now shaking the ground. America is two nations: one fighting people and power, the other fighting demons and destiny. And aftershocks, unlike earthquakes, don’t stop until the ground itself gives way.