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April 10, 2026
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"The labels liberal and conservative used to mean something fairly clear. A liberal used to mean somebody who believed in the individual, who believed in the free market, who believed that you should break down all the barriers toward individual self-expression. If this meant destroying the church or weakening the power of parents within their family, destroying social classes, all sorts of conventions, this is what liberals were in favor of. What conservatives were interested in doing was preserving a kind of cultural order, preserving a tradition, preserving a sense of sacrednessâeven if they werenât particularly religious themselves, they had to preserve that sense of the sacred. And what happened in the 1940s and 50s is that conservatism got defined as what used to be called liberal. In other words, the free market is everything, the individual is everything. Forget familyâforget everything, essentially, but the marketplace and the defense of the nation, because the old liberals were also great colonialists. And the people who called themselves liberals were in fact socialists or worse. What was somebody with something like a conservative worldview going to do? There was no place. There was no label. There was no party. There was no movement. Itâs like being a conservative environmentalist today. The greatest environmental thinker, the most powerful philosopher of conservation today, is Wendell Berry, who is a conservative. He lives on his little farm in rural Kentucky. He writes books about managing his own little family farm. Heâs a Christian, heâs a traditionalist, but heâs on the board of the Sierra Club. Why? Because thereâs no conservative organization that would welcome Wendell Berry; they think heâs the devil incarnate. And that, in a nutshell, is the failure of American conservatismânot to make a place for the real social, cultural, and moral conservatives who have surfaced from time to time. Jack Kerouac was a conservative and nobody knew that at the time. Why was he a conservative? He thought of himself as a man of the right. He thought he was a patriot. He was a rugged, old-fashioned individualist, but he loved America. He hated this rise of America-bashing of the 60s, and heâs quite an interesting person. Obviously, he was a moral anarchist in some sense, but way down deep he had the...impulses of a Baudelaire, who was also a conservative."
"For six years they did nothing to end abortion on demand or overturn Roe v. Wade."
"I think it's time that people who really do believe in the sanctity of human life ... should look for people that are not just talking the talk when it's election time."
"The Turning Point founder was addressing the subject of gun violence when he was fatally shot in Utah. Kirk was known to be a gun owner himself and regularly spoke out on the issue, including on behalf of the National Rifle Association in the aftermath of the massacre at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Florida, in February 2018. At a Turning Point event in Salt Lake City in April 2023, he said, âItâs worth it to have a cost of, unfortunately, some gun deaths every single year so that we can have the Second Amendment.â"
"Kirkâs comments extended to dangerous misinformation. Just moments before his fatal shooting, he responded to a question about trans mass shooters by saying âToo many,â despite data showing the vast majority of such incidents are committed by cisgender men. His influence was not limited to media. Kirk played a key role in shaping conservative youth discourse through Turning Point USA, a platform that has been criticised for hosting events and promoting narratives hostile to LGBTQ+ communities. Despite this, he was invited as the first guest on California Governor Gavin Newsomâs podcast earlier this year, a move that drew backlash given Kirkâs history of incendiary remarks. While tributes from political allies, including President Donald Trump, praised Kirk as âlegendary,â critics argue that his legacy is marred by a pattern of bigotry and harmful rhetoric."
"The boisterous partisan rhetoric during the funeral of Minnesota Sen. Paul Wellstone (D-Minnesota), who died in a plane crash before the 2002 elections, provoked a backlash that became known as the âWellstone effectâ and was a factor in the subsequent defeat of his replacement on the ballot, former vice president Walter Mondale. There were political overtones to the 2018 memorial service for Sen. John McCain (R), whose war heroism Trump had disparaged and whose service also took place in Arizona. But eulogist Joe Biden, then a former vice president, lamented: âAll we do today is attack the oppositions of both parties, their motives, not the substance of their argument.â Since then, that divide has only deepened. As the memorial for Kirk so vividly demonstrated, the growing imperative for the movement that Trump started and Kirk helped elevate is not to bridge, but to conquer."
"Reject feminism. Submit to your husband, Taylor. You're not in charge."
"That Kirk did not explicitly advocate for the stoning of gays to death, in the strictest sense and syntax of those words, is therefore a distinction without a difference â unless, like Kirk, youâre a liar. In that case, the distinction between saying what youâre saying and not saying what youâre saying is important. If that collapses, so does your deception. As long as the distinction between what is said and what is intended to be understood is in place, itâs possible to bully people into silence. Thatâs what happened to Stephen King and others. They spoke the truth about Kirk â not the strict letter of it but the true spirit of it â but did not have the courage to stand by the truth after being accused of slander. And in the process of apologizing, they ended up affirming the lie, making it grow bigger, such that a USA Today story about Kingâs apology says that he ârepeatedly apologized for a false accusation.â (After all, it must have been false if Stephen King apologized for it.)"
"It's a strange tweet that Elon pinpointed on here. But the first part is absolutely true. Let's go to this. "Jewish communities have been pushing the exact kind of hatred against whites that they claim to want people to stop using against them." Now, I don't like generalizations. Not every Jewish person believes that, but it is true that the Anti-Defamation League was part and parcel with Black Lives Matter. It is true that some of the largest financiers of left-wing anti-White causes have been Jewish Americans. They went all in on woke. And it wasn't just ADL, it was some of the top Jewish organizations in the country that have done that."
"When I hear the slogan, "make America great again", I'm also hearing, "return America to its British roots"."
"Franklin Graham recently reminded us of something Iâve always admired about Charlie Kirk: he stood firmly on biblical truth, but he did it with compassion. He debated boldly, yet never with malice. He modeled what it looks like to stand on Godâs Word while still loving those who disagreed. Thatâs what struck me most about Charlieâs ministry. When culture calls biblical truth hate speech, Christians must remember that speaking Godâs Word is the highest form of love."
"Charlie Kirk, the founder of Turning Point USA and a prominent figure in the American conservative movement, was fatally shot during a live event at Utah Valley University on 10 September. His death has reignited scrutiny over his controversial political stances, particularly his outspoken opposition to LGBTQ+ rights and inclusion. Kirk, aged 31, built his reputation as a staunch supporter of right-wing ideologies, often courting controversy with inflammatory remarks. His views on LGBTQ issues were among the most divisive. He frequently described progressive stances on gender and sexuality as âsexual anarchyâ and condemned LGBTQ-inclusive education, arguing that it eroded cultural identity. In multiple broadcasts and public appearances, Kirk used anti-transgender slurs and celebrated being able to do so on platforms like Rumble. He labelled transgender individuals as âgroomersâ and advocated for banning gender-affirming care, even suggesting that providers should face âNuremberg-style trialsâ. His rhetoric aligned with broader efforts in right-wing media to roll back LGBTQ+ protections, including celebrating Supreme Court rulings that allowed businesses to discriminate against LGBTQ+ customers on religious grounds."
"He rose to prominence during the first Trump administration through his podcast, cable news appearances and campus speaking tours. His views were often viewed as controversial. As an anti-abortion Christian, he routinely debated progressive liberals, Muslims, and the LGBT+ community, resulting in allegations of misogyny, Islamophobia, and homophobia.During the Covid pandemic, he denounced mask mandates. He referred to vaccine requirements as âmedical apartheidâ and also promoted Trumpâs false claim that the 2020 presidential election was âriggedâ against him by a vast Democratic conspiracy. Kirk frequently adopted Trumpian talking points, blaming DEI (diversity, equity, and inclusion) hiring practices for flooding in Texas earlier this year, calling New York City mayoral candidate Zohran Mamdani âa parasiteâ and attempting to steer the national conversation away from Jeffrey Epstein by announcing he was âdoneâ with the subject."
"MAGA activist Charlie Kirk, who was shot dead while speaking at a university campus in Utah on Wednesday, was well known for his outspoken opinions on a number of hot-button political issues. The 31-year-old co-founder of Turning Point USA, a key ally of President Donald Trump, was shot in the neck by a sniperâs bullet at an event at Utah Valley University in Orem and was rushed to a local hospital, where he was pronounced dead. A police manhunt for the gunman is ongoing. A Chicago-born son of an architect, Kirk co-founded Turning Point when he was just 18 years old alongside businessman Bill Montgomery with the aim of promoting conservative values in Americaâs universities and colleges."
"I do have a daughter .. that's awfully graphic .. calm down... the answer is yes, the baby would be delivered. But let me tell you why: no, hold on, let me ask you a question."
"Islam is the sword the left is using to slit the throat of America."
"Generally though Kirk was loyal to Trump, whom he saw as key to establishing the conservative Christian America he wanted to help realize, one in which abortion is heavily restricted to cases of medical emergency in which the motherâs life cannot be saved by any other means, women enter higher education to find husbands and âwokeâ ideologies play no part in public life. Donald Trump Jr., a friend with whom he visited Greenland in January, said the MAGA movement will deeply miss Charlie Kirk as one of its most influential young voices."
"If it feels like youâre being forced to honor and respect a demagogue and liar under penalty of ⌠some bad thing, well, youâre not wrong. As Radley Balko said Monday, âwe're witnessing the most aggressive, fanatical crackdown on free speech in my lifetime. The speed and breadth of government censorship and private sector and nonprofit capitulation has been astonishing, as has the lack of urgency [or] silence from people who've long claimed to care about this stuff.â How is this happening? Consider the case of Stephen King. Yes, that Stephen King. Last week, on Twitter, the novelist quoted-tweeted remarks by Fox host Jesse Watters. âCharlie Kirk was not a âcontroversialâ or âpolarizingâ man,â Watters said. âCharlie was a PATRIOT. THIS is a turning point and we all need to turn in the right direction. Rest in peace, my friend.â It should be said first of all that this is a lie. Kirk was nothing but controversial and polarizing. That was his entire shtick. And thatâs why Stephen King said: âHe advocated for stoning gays to death. Just sayinâ.â"
"Change my mind."
"America is the only country where even those who hate it refuse to leave."
"Jews have been some of the largest funders of cultural Marxist ideas and supporters of those ideas over the last 30 or 40 years. [âŚ] Until you cleanse that ideology from the hierarchy in the academic elite of the West, there will not be a safe future. I'm not going to say Israel won't exist, but Israel will be in jeopardy as long as the Western children, children of the West, are being taught, with primarily Jewish dollars, subsidizing it, to view everything through oppressor-oppressed dynamic."
"The one issue that I think is so against our senses, so against the natural law, and dare I say a throbbing middle finger to God is the transgender thing happening in America."
"Q: Do you know how many transgender Americans have been mass shooters over the last ten years? Kirk: Too many. Q: It's five. Now five is a lot, right? I'm going to give you credit. Do you know how many mass shooters there have been in America over the last ten years? Kirk: Counting or not counting gang violence?"
"[Charlie Kirk] felt that Bibi Netanyahu was a very destructive force. He was appalled by what was happening in Gaza. He was above all resentful that he believed Netanyahu was using the United States to prosecute his wars, for the benefit of his country, and that it was shameful and embarrassing and bad for the United States and he resented it."
"One thing that frustrates me most is how often Charlieâs critics ripped his words out of context. Take his comment on the Civil Rights Act. Critics spun it as racist, when his point was about federal government overreach â not opposing equal rights. Or his remarks on the Second Amendment, where he said liberty comes with a cost. Opponents twisted that into indifference about human life, even though he also called those deaths tragic. Even Scripture itself has been twisted this way for centuries. Satan quoted Psalm 91 out of context when tempting Jesus (Matthew 4:6). Why should we expect the world to treat modern truth-tellers any differently? Thatâs the real playbook: rip words from their setting, slap a label of âhate,â and dismiss the speaker entirely."
"The world says truth is hate. But in reality, the absence of truth is the cruelest hate of all. Paul reminds us that love rejoices in truth (1 Corinthians 13:6), and that we must âspeak the truth in loveâ (Ephesians 4:15). To stay silent while people remain in sin is not love â itâs indifference. Even this week, a Reuters report on a law professor suspended over posts about Kirk shows how fiercely culture now polices speech around controversial public figures. That should wake us up. If even Scripture is branded as hate, then we must be prepared to face the same hostility. Standing firm in a world turned upside down. The culture may label us âhaters,â but the truth is this: standing on Godâs Word is the most loving thing we can do. Charlie Kirk lived this out boldly. And Franklin Grahamâs defense of him reminds us that true Christianity is not about silencing sin or watering down truth. Itâs about proclaiming Christ with courage and compassion. Like Charlie, we are called to hold fast to biblical truth â no matter the cost."
"I have a very, very radical view on this, but I can defend it, and Iâve thought about it. We made a huge mistake when we passed the Civil Rights Act in the 1960s."
"You don't have to stay poor. You don't have to accept being worse off than your parents. You don't have to feel aimless and unhappy. You don't have to support leaders who lied to you and took advantage of you for your vote. America's future is a series of choices."
"What we as a culture have to get back to is being able to have a reasonable disagreement, where violence is not an option."
"I'm sorry, if I see a Black pilot, I'm going to be like, "Boy, I hope he's qualified.""
"Hate speech does not exist legally in America. There's ugly speech. There's gross speech. There's evil speech. And ALL of it is protected by the First Amendment. Keep America free."
"You don't have to say nice things about Charlie Kirk just because heâs dead. You can condemn political violence in all its forms â and you should. You can wish his family well. You can express your sincere condolences to all families of all victims of all political violence. You can even overlook, if you believe itâs worth it, the fact that he spent nearly all of his young adult life selling for profit the hatred of racial and sexual minorities, liberalism and the Democrats generally. You can choose to do these things in full confidence that you have lived up to your obligation as a decent human being. But otherwise, you donât have to say nice things in order to prove to someone â whoever that is â that you are not glad heâs dead. You donât have to prove anything."
""Oh, MLK's a great guy." Actually MLK was awful. OK? He's not a good person. He said one good thing he actually didn't believe."
"And it says, by the way, , â might want to crack open that Bible of yours â in a lesser referenced part of the same part of Scripture, is in Leviticus 18, is that "Thou shall lay with another man, shall be stoned to death." Just sayin'. So, Ms. Rachel, you quote Leviticus 19, "Love your neighbor as yourself". The chapter before affirms God's perfect law when it comes to sexual matter."
"Kirk adopted a traditional Christian conservative stance in his approach to many contemporary issues, telling an audience at a Trump election rally in Georgia last fall that Democrats âstand for everything God hatesâ and adding: âThis is a Christian state. Iâd like to see it stay that way.â He also lashed out at the gay community, denouncing what he called the âLGBTQ agenda,â expressing opposition to same-sex marriage and suggesting that the Bible verse Leviticus 20:13, which endorses the execution of homosexuals, serves as âGodâs perfect law when it comes to sexual matters.â âI donât agree with your lifestyle,â Kirk told a gay Wisconsin college student last September. âI donât think you should introduce yourself just based on your sexuality because thatâs not who you are.â He also argued against gender-affirming care for transgender people and insisted there are only two genders, sporting a T-shirt at one Arizona rally last year that read: âxy = man.â More recently, he discussed the burning of Pride flags, writing on X (Twitter): âWe should work to overturn every conviction for those arrested, fined, or otherwise harassed for the âhate crimeâ of doing donuts over Pride flags painted on public streets."
"To all the young people of America and Gen Z, I want you to know President Trump is going to deliver for you. So that you could be able to own a home, have big families, believe in this country"
"This week, the Associated Press said Charlie Kirk was âassassinatedâ Wednesday on a college campus in Utah, where he was evidently shot through the neck. That characterization, however, is not neutral. It conveys the presidentâs preferred view of his death, as an example of America becoming a âkilling fieldâ that requires the remedies of a strongman, like murdering the homeless, per Trump's fave TV show. But Kirk was not assassinated. He was murdered. Yes, he was a prominent figure. Yes, he was very important to the Republican Party. But he wasn't running for high office, he wasn't leading a mass movement and he was not democratically elected. If anything, he had a high perch, because billionaires gave it to him. Melissa Hortman was assassinated, however. She was a Democratic legislator and the former speaker of the state House who led the enactment of sweeping progressive reforms in Minnesota. In June, she was assassinated by an anti-vaccine terrorist named Vance Boelter. Boelter killed three others, including Hortmanâs husband. But he was not assassinated. Neither were the other two, though two of the three were also lawmakers. They were murdered. Hortman was a former speaker. For that reason, her murder rises to the level of assassination. This is not just semantics. By elevating Kirk's murder to the level of an assassination, he's turned into a moral figure who appears to transcend politics, such that we are forced to either praise him â or at least say nice things about him â or remain silent for fear of being seen as endorsing political violence. That is, of course, one of the goals of authoritarian politics â to censor, silence and suppress the opposition by any means. Kirk was key to that. He presented himself and his organization as champions of free speech on college campuses while also keeping lists, complete with pictures, of professors and students who said and wrote things he didn't like in order to encourage people to monitor and harass them."
"Literally, not a single Democrat is celebrating the Kirk assassination. It's complete wishcasting on the right. They're radicalizing their followers based on an inaccurate view of their opponents that fits with a victimization narrative. Meanwhile, the most prominent people on their side start indulging in conspiracy theories and gleefully sharing memes after [Nancy] Pelosi's husband is attacked ⌠The hypocrisy is overwhelming. They get off on the idea of âcivil warâ and collapse and invent the reality they want to see. They imagine Democrats are like themselves when they're not. Under these conditions, the president and his goon squad are almost certainly going to try targeting all of âthe left,â as Kirk defined it. The regime is already arresting people for the âcrimeâ of their race, with the Supreme Courtâs blessing. If they can criminalize your identity, they can criminalize your speech â or at least force you into silence for insufficiently praising a âfree speech championâ like Charlie Kirk."
"Prove me wrong"
"I believe marriage is one man one woman Also gay people should not welcome in the conservative movement As Christians we are called to love everyone I will always stand against people who wish to establish their own personal values as a reason to kick others out of our movement"
"Never give up, never surrender, and always go for the win."
"I am here tonight to tell you, to warn you, that this election is a decision between preserving America as we know it and eliminating everything that we love."
"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 to protect our other God-given rights. That is a prudent deal. It is rational."
"I can't stand the word 'empathy' actually. I think 'empathy' is a made-up, New Age term thatâit does a lot of damage. But, it is very effective when it comes to politics. Sympathy, I prefer more than empathy."
"Joe Biden is bumbling, dementia-filled, Alzheimer's, corrupt tyrant who should honestly be put in prison and/or given the death penalty for his crimes against America."
"Three weeks ago, Blake, if we would have said that Joy Reid and Michelle Obama and Sheila Jackson Lee and Ketanji Brown Jackson were affirmative action picks, we would have been called a [rolling r] rrracist. But now they're coming out and they're saying it for us. They're coming out, and they're saying, "I'm only here because of Affirmative Action." Yeah, we know. You 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."
"It would be appropriate to suggest that Kirk could be a victim of the kind of politics that he sold, just as it was appropriate to suggest that the Marlboro Men were victims of the kind of products that they sold. (All five men died of smoking-related diseases). Kirk embraced political violence as a âremedy.â He bussed his followers to the J6 insurrection. He once said: âWe need to have a Nuremberg-style trial for every gender-affirming clinic doctor.â It is in no way an endorsement of political violence to suggest that Kirk saw the consequences of his choices, just as it was not an endorsement of, say, lung cancer to suggest that the Marlboro Men saw the consequences of theirs. In 2023, Kirk famously said annual gun deaths are a ârationalâ price for our society to pay in exchange for its liberties. âWe should not have a utopian view [of gun violence],â he said. âWe will never live in a society when you have an armed citizenry and you wonât have a single gun death. That is nonsense. Thatâs drivel. But I think itâs worth it. I think itâs worth it to have the cost of, unfortunately, some gun deaths every single year so that we can have the Second Amendment to protect our other God-given rights. That is a prudent deal. It is rational.â So itâs not only appropriate to suggest that Charlie Kirk died by the sword that he lived by, itâs deeply moral, as it affirms the belief that no one but the individual can be held responsible for the choices of that individual. (The shooter, it should go without saying, will be held responsible for his.) I would even say itâs deeply conservative to say so."
"Democrats have given hundreds of billions of dollars to illegals and foreign nations, while Gen Z has to pinch pennies just so that they can never own a home, never marry, and work until they die, childless."
"Let me preface this post by saying that violence is never okay and as much as I dislike someone and their cruel ideas, I would never want their life to be taken in an act of violence. Democracy should be built on ideas, not force. But I AM going to say this: If anyone thinks that a reasonable price for the second amendment is countless innocent lives, and then that person has the cold-heartedness and audacity to say that empathy is likened to a social disease, they will get no protracted sympathy from me. Unfriend me if you donât like hearing this simple truth. Iâll never advocate for violence in any form, but it sounds to me like karma is sometimes swift and ironic. As Kirk said, âplay certain games, win certain prizes.'"
"The five-hour memorial service for conservative activist/influencer/organizer Charlie Kirk that packed tens of thousands Sunday into a Phoenix-area stadium was a melding of religion and politics unlike any seen before. Or perhaps it was proof, if any more were needed, that the line that used to separate them may no longer exist, particularly on the right. Practically missing were the healing rituals the nation has come to know in these times when it is rocked by the all-too-common kind of tragedy that occurred when Kirk was killed Sept. 10 on a college campus in Utah. With the exception of a moving and powerful declaration by his widow, Erika Kirk, that her Christian faith calls her to forgive her husbandâs killer, there were almost no appeals for transcending the political divide or putting hate aside. Or recognition that the spasm of political violence of recent years has been the work of â and inflicted upon â both of the nationâs ideological tribes, arising in an era in which deranged individuals find in the fetid corners of online culture justification for horrendous acts. All of this formed an emblem of where the country finds itself in the Trump era. âHe did not hate his opponents. He wanted the best for them,â the president, who was the final speaker, said of Kirk. âThatâs where I disagreed with Charlie. I hate my opponent and I donât want the best for them.â"
Young though he was, his radiant energy produced such an impression of absolute reliability that Hedgewar made him the first sarkaryavah, or general secretary, of the RSS.
- Gopal Mukund Huddar
Largely because of the influence of communists in London, Huddar's conversion into an enthusiastic supporter of the fight against fascism was quick and smooth. The ease with which he crossed from one worldview to another betrays the fact that he had not properly understood the world he had grown in.
Huddar would have been 101 now had he been alive. But then centenaries are not celebrated only to register how old so and so would have been and when. They are usually celebrated to explore how much poorer our lives are without them. Maharashtrian public life is poorer without him. It is poorer for not having made the effort to recall an extraordinary life.
I regret I was not there to listen to Balaji Huddar's speech [...] No matter how many times you listen to him, his speeches are so delightful that you feel like listening to them again and again.
By the time he came out of Franco's prison, Huddar had relinquished many of his old ideas. He displayed a worldview completely different from that of the RSS, even though he continued to remain deferential to Hedgewar and maintained a personal relationship with him.