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Charlie
Kirk and America’s Fragile Fabric
Sept. 11,
2025
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/09/11/opinion/letters/charlie-kirk-assassination.html
To the
Editor:
Re
“Charlie Kirk Dies After Being Shot on a Utah Campus” (front page, Sept. 11):
The news
and commentary that so quickly followed the assassination of Charlie Kirk
capture what makes this moment so troubling. The immediate calls for vengeance
on the right, and even celebration by some voices on the left, show how fragile
our civic fabric has become.
Political
violence does more than claim lives. It corrodes the trust that allows
democracy to function and chills the willingness of citizens to enter the
public square. The viral spread of violent images deepens the trauma, planting
fear far beyond the scene itself.
For me,
this event felt like a turning point. While scholars debate whether diverse
democracies can endure, what is clear is that tolerating violence — whether by
action or by silence — will make our democracy unlivable.
We must
reject political violence in all its forms if we are to preserve even the
possibility of democratic life together.
Camerino
I. Salazar
San
Antonio
To the
Editor:
The
killing of Charlie Kirk is a tragedy, and it might never have happened if we
had serious gun control in this country.
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On the
same day that Mr. Kirk was killed, two students were critically wounded at a
Colorado high school; the suspect in the shooting then took his own life. A few
days earlier another potential school shooting was prevented in Washington
State when the police raided the home of a 13-year-old who had been making
threats online and found 23 guns in the house. All this not long after a
shooter opened fire at a morning Mass at Annunciation Catholic School in
Minneapolis, killing two children and wounding some 20 others.
In 2023,
Mr. Kirk said, “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.”
Sadly,
Charlie Kirk paid that cost with his life.
Alix
Wilber
Seattle
To the
Editor:
In one of
my classes, I showed the Zapruder film of the assassination of President John
F. Kennedy in 1963. Most of my students have seen such graphic violence only in
movies and video games. It is still a horrific piece of film.
On
Wednesday they all saw (on their preferred social media platforms) the
assassination of Charlie Kirk. It was also horrific to watch.
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We will
hear the same rhetoric on both sides of the aisle in the wake of this murder.
“It’s the guns,” liberals will cry. Conservatives will retort: “Guns don’t kill
people. People kill people.”
And
nothing will change, because we are asking the wrong questions in our echo
chambers.
We can
post our memes on social media about the number of gun deaths we have had in
America this year, or wave our Second Amendment placards. Nothing will change
until we look at the real beneficiaries of such violence. And they certainly
won’t change if we — on both sides of the debate — remain entrenched in our
ideological camps.
(Rev.)
John Tamilio III
Beverly,
Mass.
The
writer is a professor of philosophy at Salem State University.
To the
Editor:
I am a
moderate Democrat who has voted for the D column in every election since I
returned from the Vietnam War in 1969. Charlie Kirk’s political stance was not
one I admired. His close affiliation with President Trump further alienated me
from his politics.
But his
assassination Wednesday made me sick to my stomach. Likewise, I abhor what this
president and his Republican supporters in the House and the Senate are doing
to my country.
But when
the assassination attempt against Mr. Trump happened in Butler, Pa., last year,
I was both aghast and infuriated. Political change in America should be the
result of the ballot box, not the ammunition box.
In a
country where there are more guns than people, I am numb as each day’s news
cycle brings me more horrific stories of school shootings, political
assassinations and crimes involving firearms. We cannot appear to find a middle
ground on reducing gun violence, and we are more divided than ever. But it
doesn’t have to be this way.
As we
mark 24 years since the Sept. 11 attacks, we should remind ourselves of our
country’s motto: E pluribus unum. Out of many, one.
Len
DiSesa
Dresher,
Pa.
To the
Editor:
I am from
Europe. My first thought after yet another shooting tragedy in the United
States is: Why are you surprised, America? The sacrosanct right to bear arms in
this country allows, even abets, this kind of abomination.
Exactly
what kind of good comes out of it? The restrictions on buying alcohol seem
stricter. The whole thing boggles the mind and kills way too many innocent
people. It is a blemish on this otherwise extraordinary nation.
Catherine
Luborsky
Far
Hills, N.J.


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