Opinion
Guest
Essay
Tyler
Robinson and Our Poisonous Internet
Sept. 14,
2025
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/09/14/opinion/charlie-kirk-shooting-internet.html
By Nathan
Taylor Pemberton
Mr.
Pemberton writes about extremism and American politics.
Moments
into a Friday morning news conference announcing the apprehension of a suspect
in Charlie Kirk’s killing, the governor of Utah, Spencer Cox, began to read
aloud the phrases reportedly engraved on the assassin’s bullet casings:
“Notices
bulges OWO what’s this?”
“Hey
fascist! Catch!”
“Oh bella
ciao bella ciao bella ciao ciao ciao.”
“If you
read this you are gay lmao.”
These
cryptic words were read tentatively by Mr. Cox, who seemed to have little idea
of their meaning and provided no further context. The governor also relayed how
the suspect, Tyler Robinson, 22, communicated his actions to friends on the
Discord group chat platform. One relative, Mr. Cox said, described Mr. Robinson
as “full of hate.”
The only
thing that can be said conclusively about Mr. Robinson, at this moment, is that
he was a chronically online, white American male.
The
internet’s political communities and the open-source sleuths currently
scrambling to place Mr. Robinson into a coherent ideological camp certainly
won’t be content with any of this. Nor will they be satisfied with the other
likelihood awaiting us: that Mr. Robinson, the son of a seemingly content
Mormon family, probably possesses a mishmash of ideological stances. Some held
dearly. Others not so much. They also will not be satisfied that this horrific,
society-changing act of violence was most likely committed both as an ironic
gesture and as a pure political statement.
If your
head is spinning from the internet’s attempts to read into Mr. Robinson’s
alleged choices and political identity, that’s understandable. We’ve fully
stepped into a different historical moment: the age of brain-poisoning meme
politics.
Despite
mounting evidence that the toxic energies of the internet have begun to spill
over into our real lives, there has been a reluctance to take the things
happening online very seriously. The revolting death spectacle that took place
at Utah Valley University is a new kind of political event.
While the
internet’s rot once felt safely bottled, or fire-walled, within a digital
realm, this act of political violence may have punctured whatever barrier once
existed. We can no longer ignore that we live in an era where the online and
the lived are indistinguishable.
Today’s
internet for most Americans, but especially for those like Mr. Robinson, who
came of age on social and streaming platforms, is an immeasurably potent vibes
machine. One powered by a complex fuel of negative emotions — hatred, rage,
hopelessness, nihilism, grievance, cynicism, paranoia, discontent and
addiction. It’s a machine more than capable of constructing false realities and
corroding our lived experiences.
Intent,
meaning and sincerity are near-valueless concepts in this realm, while things
like knowledge, understanding and good faith — critical elements to any healthy
public sphere — have been gradually distorted beyond the point of recognition,
or abandoned completely.
To exist
in this machine is to exist in a realm dominated by what the writer Anton Jäger
termed “hyperpolitics,” for the “low-cost, low-entry” politics with little ties
to political institutions or clear political outcomes. To be a young person on
large areas of the internet, in other words, is to exist in a state of
perpetual conflict, where every action, every event, is coded with political
significance, couched in irony or presented in a combative posture, starting
from the moment one goes online.
It’s
rapidly driving a generation mad. (And the rest of us, as well.) Governor Cox
made a blunt declaration at Friday’s press conference. “Social media is a
cancer on our society,” he said. “Go outside and touch grass.”
The
beliefs flourishing in these online political spaces are fringe ideas — from
conspiratorial thinking about the 2020 election, paranoia about white
replacement, the glorification of political violence and moral panics built on
stereotypes about minority groups. And they are fed to people on an
algorithmically driven conveyor belt in the form of grotesque memes, viral
streams, images of death and destruction, ironic posturing and trolling.
It’s
likely that the influence of this machine, and its ability to drive young
people to the radical fringes, would be diminished if American life today
wasn’t governed by a sense of chaos and collapse. Economic insecurity,
increasing unemployment, the inability to start families or buy homes, coupled
with a livestreamed parade of death emanating from Gaza and the Trump
administration’s deployment of the National Guard into American cities, are
just a few obvious factors driving these feelings.
Figures
like Mr. Kirk, along with other right-wing influencers, including Ben Shapiro,
Laura Loomer and the white nationalist Nick Fuentes, have thrived in this new
landscape. They’ve used the internet’s reactionary machinery to great profit,
building mass followings and influence in the process. Mr. Kirk, who had one of
its loudest and most recognizable voices, was an avatar of the new political
species moving through this machine: a type of political entity, combining
elements of celebrity, demagogue, shock jock, thought leader, content creator
and activist. Turning Point USA, the campus activism group he co-founded,
operated less like an organized political movement and more like a curious
followership or fandom.
The
message propagated by Mr. Kirk, in his regular livestreams and during his
famous campus debates, has been strangely labeled “moderate” in the immediate
aftermath of his death. Conservative media and traditional outlets alike have
celebrated his reputation for a willingness to foster open dialogues and the
exchange of free ideas.
This
characterization is out of step with the reality of Mr. Kirk’s activism, which
was defined by a pugilistic bigotry and dehumanizing political rhetoric. He
warned white Americans to be on the lookout for “prowling Blacks” and described
George Floyd as a “scumbag.” He promoted the “great replacement” theory,
accused Jewish philanthropists of funding “anti-whiteness,” and claimed that,
if President Trump lost the 2024 election, Alabama would be overrun by
“hundreds of thousands of Haitians.”
A young
internet user following just Mr. Kirk could offer a fairly accurate glimpse
into the atmosphere of perpetual rage-baiting that is today’s internet. Mr.
Kirk lived to pick apart cotton-mouthed college freshmen at his signature
campus debate events, each noted on his social channels with some belligerent
title: “Charlie Kirk Crushes Woke Lies.” “Charlie Kirk Hands Out Huge Ls.”
“Charlie Kirk vs. the Washington State Woke Mob.” And regularly, he lashed out
at his perceived political foes, like Zohran Mamdani, the New York mayoral
candidate whom he recently described as a “self-righteous, narcissistic
parasite” who “should be expelled from politics.” To be clear, Mr. Kirk’s
ideas, however distasteful and problematic, are no justification for murder.
What’s
apparent, looking back on his ideas and the style in which he expressed them,
is that Mr. Kirk used his platform to coarsen our political discourse, draining
it of that vital bulwark against real-world violence: empathy.
While
much has been made of his ability to connect with Gen Z, there has been little
effort to hold his legacy to account for failing to impart this critical human
quality to his young audiences. “The Youth Whisperer of the American Right,” as
this paper once called him, may have been precisely that, a showman who
attracted disaffected young Americans into the conservative movement with
fantasies of white replacement or racial grievance.
The
combative and rage-bait style that Mr. Kirk pioneered has become the dominant
mode for the right. And it’s probably more accurate to say this is how many
young Americans as a whole exist on the internet today, trolling and provoking
anyone who crosses their paths.
Back in
July, in an essay about the trolling style of politics infecting conservatism,
I wrote that “conflict itself is the high-voltage current that powers online
engagement and amplifies messages.” Mr. Kirk was a master architect of
political conflict, engineered for maximum reach.
That his
killer might have been in pursuit of a similar moment of viral conflict is a
grim encapsulation of the nightmare cesspit we’ve entered.
The
internet machine is now operating out in the open, in front of everyone’s eyes,
and as long as that continues unchecked, our ability to make meaning of the
world will continue to deteriorate. Empathy, as a human quality, will be
snuffed out for those who are chronically online. The memes, and the memetic
violence, will continue to proliferate.
Nathan
Taylor Pemberton writes about extremism and American politics.


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