On the brutal murder of Charlie Kirk, the certain blowback, and this country’s raging gun problem.
A makeshift memorial is set up at Turning Point USA headquarters after the shooting death at a Utah college on Wednesday, of Charlie Kirk.(Ross D. Franklin / AP Photo)
Obviously, I have to start this week talking about another senseless act of gun violence. On Wednesday, an unidentified teenager shot two of his classmates at Evergreen High School in Jefferson County, Colorado. The gunman then turned the weapon—which authorities describe as a revolver—on himself, and took his own life. Both of his victims remain in the hospital, one in critical condition.
School shootings have become such a consistent feature of our society that we react to them almost casually. Only the family and friends of those involved mourn the victims. Flags are not lowered to half-mast out of respect for innocent young lives taken in places of learning and education. Politicians do not address the tragedies with compelling ideas to fix the problem. Presidents do not address the nation from the Oval Office to offer their plan for getting guns out of schools and keeping our children safe.
Unlike some people, I do not think the constant drumbeat of death and violence at our nation’s schools is an acceptable price to pay for the freedom to own a private arsenal. I don’t think the Second Amendment should be interpreted as a murder-suicide pact.
Every life lost to gun violence is a preventable tragedy. Our country refuses to prevent it. These shootings are not inevitable. We have chosen to live this way, under the oppressive threat of gun violence. And our choices are terrible.
The Bad and the Ugly
Inspired Takes
The Nation’s Joan Walsh refuses to forget who Charlie Kirk really was, and what he really stood for. This is the only thing I’m going to link to in this space this week. Not just because it’s so well written, but also because it refuses to accept the white-wing sanewashing of Kirk’s career. The fact that The Nation published this piece, as opposed to, I don’t know, firing Joan Walsh for having the power to remember things that have actually happened, is a pretty good example of why I work here and not at other places.
Worst Argument of the Week
The Internet is awash in bad takes about Charlie Kirk right now, but there is one man who decided to use the ingredients of every bad take and dissolve them into a slop that perfectly encapsulates everything wrong with mainstream, white media in this moment. That man is Ezra Klein. His piece, unconscionably titled “Charlie Kirk Was Practicing Politics the Right Way,” goes beyond the mere hagiography of a guy whose literal last words were a racial insult to achieve a level of intellectual detachment from reality that I believe can only be reached by a white man in America.
Klein writes, “You can dislike much of what Kirk believed and the following statement is still true: Kirk was practicing politics in exactly the right way.” I want people to pay attention to Klein’s word choices here, because nearly every one of them is covered in white supremacist apologia shit. A close read:
Klein’s article goes on to condemn political violence. I agree with that, of course. But condemning political violence as an op-ed columnist is a little bit like condemning the French Revolution when you’re a member of the aristocracy. It is in our best interests to condemn the violent murder of public figures, because we all know we might be next. That doesn’t make us empathetic or graceful or more enlightened than the least common denominator on social media; it makes us self-interested.
I know that many important organizations are asking you to donate today, but this year especially, The Nation needs your support.
Over the course of 2025, the Trump administration has presided over a government designed to chill activism and dissent.
The Nation experienced its efforts to destroy press freedom firsthand in September, when Vice President JD Vance attacked our magazine. Vance was following Donald Trump’s lead—waging war on the media through a series of lawsuits against publications and broadcasters, all intended to intimidate those speaking truth to power.
The Nation will never yield to these menacing currents. We have survived for 160 years and we will continue challenging new forms of intimidation, just as we refused to bow to McCarthyism seven decades ago. But in this frightening media environment, we’re relying on you to help us fund journalism that effectively challenges Trump’s crude authoritarianism.
For today only, a generous donor is matching all gifts to The Nation up to $25,000. If we hit our goal this Giving Tuesday, that’s $50,000 for journalism with a sense of urgency.
With your support, we’ll continue to publish investigations that expose the administration’s corruption, analysis that sounds the alarm on AI’s unregulated capture of the military, and profiles of the inspiring stories of people who successfully take on the ICE terror machine.
We’ll also introduce you to the new faces and ideas in this progressive moment, just like we did with New York City Mayor-elect Zohran Mamdani. We will always believe that a more just tomorrow is in our power today.
Please, don’t miss this chance to double your impact. Donate to The Nation today.
Katrina vanden Heuvel
Editor and publisher, The Nation
Moreover, it is entirely possible to condemn political violence and mourn the victims of political violence without lauding the political influence of the victims of the violence. Klein fails that should-be-basic test.
Charlie Kirk represented the very worst American political discourse had to offer, and I wish he were still alive so I could tell that to him, to his face, over and over again. I wish he lived long enough to see everything that he worked to achieve crumble all around him.
You see what I did there, Ezra? It’s really not hard.
What I Wrote
Before the shooting, the biggest story in America was the Supreme Court’s authorization of racial profiling against Latinos. I wrote about it here. After the white media is done celebrating their martyred mascot of racism and bigotry, I hope we can resume our conversation about how the rest of us are forced to live in this white supremacist state.
In News Unrelated to the Current Chaos
Sorry folks, I don’t have it in me this week. It’s all chaos, all the time, and even my incredible powers of self-distraction feel a little deflated right now. The freaking Yankees held a moment of silence to honor a man whose entire life was dedicated to denigrating people like me and people I care about, but somehow in death that man is a true Yankee? I’ve never been more happy to be a Mets fan in all of my life.
All I can do is try to weather the storm. Violent whites have their blood up, and that usually means incredibly bad things for people like me. I’ve got public appearances that I probably need to cancel. I hope to survive this by staying as far away from white folks as I possibly can until their fever breaks.
Elie MystalTwitterElie Mystal is The Nation’s justice correspondent and a columnist. He is also an Alfred Knobler Fellow at the Type Media Center. He is the author of two books: the New York Times bestseller Allow Me to Retort: A Black Guy’s Guide to the Constitution and Bad Law: Ten Popular Laws That Are Ruining America, both published by The New Press. You can subscribe to his Nation newsletter “Elie v. U.S.” here.