Long post ahead:
I have refrained from commenting on the Charlie Kirk murder this week in order to a) get more information on the guy and b) let the investigation play out.
From the get go, this is tragic for his wife and children, whom I offer my sincerest condolences and sympathies.
I also see this as tragic for the American people, regardless of the political affliation or leaning. No one "wins" in this. This is seeing a once great nation of protected political expression devolve into mob rule by faction. Its terrifying as much as it is depressing.
I will, however, take a moment to try to offer an opinion: we have seen this before elsewhere, but never to this scale or at this speed.
The Anni di Piombo (Years of Lead) in Italy took place from 1968 to 1988, and pitted far-left terrorists, far-right terrorists, and Government factions against one another; with massive foriegn interference and influence pulling the strings. It caused 400 deaths and close to 2000 other injuries, as well as tens of thousands of arrests.
The main cause of these years of bombings, assasinations, and terror? The failure of Christian Democracy to maintain the social contract with citizens founded during Italy's post-War economic miracle. The Workers and Students Unions were quickly infiltrated by the Communists (with help from the KGB) and the business owners, and marginalized right-wingers were easy targets for the Fascists; who wanted a return to the stability they enjoyed under Il Duce. Mix in some Cosa Nostra and N'Dhragetti, you have the perfect storm of political instability and violence to see the world burn around you.
So, how does this relate to Charlie Kirk and the United States in 2025? You have to go back to 2014 and the tail-end of the Obama Administration. There was an air of smugness in the far-left, especially with Obama's defeats of prominent old-money Republicans, Senator MCain and Senator Romney. The GOP had no front-runner, and the ground was laid for major social reforms and actions to be taken. That summer, numerous State bills on abortion, same-sex discrimination, and trans rights discrimination were struck down by the SCOTUS.
The beginning of the true "Woke" movement started in Ferguson with the shooting death of Michael Brown by police, and with that came a "you are either with us, or against us" division between racialised groups and the "Back the Blue" crowds.
Enter DJT. A man who had previously supported the Democratic Party, derided the GOP, and had no dog in the political arena. After hinting at making a presidential run in 2011 during his Comedy Central roast, he looks like he might be serious. But then this is where things take off.
His initial 2015 run shows him as brash, uneducated, racist, xenophobic, dishonest, and sexist. Its lampooned heavily in the media and by the left with vigour. No one thinks he has a shot in hell of winning. Except.
Those far-right outliers that were shoved to the side in political discussions become emboldened. Much like those same ones on the far-left were during the Obama Administration.
Fast forward to 6 Jan 2021. We all know what happened and why. But this was the first step of many into the current Anni di Piombo. Those on the far-right weren't willing to step back into the shadows. The far-left wasn't going to hear them out, either. They needed to get back to work undoing all the damage done by Donny. We see a flash in the pan, but everything settles eventually, right?
Enter the podcast and TikTok. On the far-right, you have pundits and joe-blow saying "what everyone is thinking. If you don't, you're a libtard". On the far-left, same folks yelling "everyone who I disagree with is a fascist."
There is no room for nuiance or debate. Only absolutes and extremes.
Charlie Kirk, while attempting to debate, was an absolutist in his positions. I have watched some of his debates and, while the points he are trying to make may have some substance, he either faces the same absolutist thinking (which is easily refuted) or dismisses legitimate rebuttals as farciful.
And thus here we find ourselves in the wake of this shooting in the same cycle: far-right calling for retaliation/war, far-left gloating/memeing, some folks floating between anger and apathy, others pointing out the reams of other political violence that have occured on both sides: all while the stock at Smith and Weston went up a full dollar a share the day it happened.
This will not end until both sides move toward the centre and try to find common ground, not division. The absolutism needs to stop; there is value in debate, true debate, when you are willing to cede your position to make the argument better and more factual. The result is what matters: do we have a more, well rounded solution, or did "my" solution "win" because I was unwilling to let shit go?
I see this happen almost weekly on this forum (shamefully, I have participated in it) and it often gets us no where in growing in our thinking or shortening the distance on the issues that matter.
This horrible murder was politically motivated, and is unfortunately being politically exploited by both factions. This happened with the Primavalle fire in April 1973, in which both the far-right and far-left took glee in an MSI member (fascist) and his two sons (22 and 8) burning alive in an apartment in Milan.
It will go round and round, with both sides claiming the moral high ground and blaming one another. This is the cycle we find ourselves in until either dissent is squashed entirely, on both sides come to the table in solidarity to hear one another out.
Until then, I offer thoughts and prayers to his wife and kids, and hope it doesn't take 20 years for this to resolve in the U.S.