Charlie Kirk is dead. Shot while speaking on a college campus for daring to exercise his right to freedom of speech.
The regime will tell you this was the act of a lone gunman. A disturbed young man. A tragedy, yes, but not political.
Don’t believe them.
This was political. And it was predictable.
For years, the ruling class and Leviathan have stoked hatred—demonizing its enemies, dehumanizing dissenters, teaching generation after generation that anyone outside the ruling orthodoxy is not just wrong but evil. It tells you that conservatives are “fascists,” that parents at school board meetings are “domestic terrorists,” that questioning the regime’s authority is “a threat to democracy.”
What do you think happens when you preach that sermon long enough? Someone eventually picks up a weapon. And even more so, thinks he or she is justified to stop a so-called existential threat.
Here’s the brutal truth: Leviathan needs division. It feeds on it. Political violence isn’t a breakdown of Leviathan’s system—it’s a feature of it.
Every act of violence becomes an excuse to expand surveillance.
Every assassination or riot justifies more funding, more bureaucracy, more “security.”
Every bloodied headline is another reason for Leviathan to tighten its grip.
The problem we have as a country right now is that the Leviathan doesn’t just tolerate division—it manufactures it. It drives wedges between races, sexes, classes, and regions. It uses the corporate media to amplify every conflict, every outrage, every insult, until Americans no longer see neighbors but enemies.
Then it waits for the inevitable spark. A campus shooting. A riot. A bomb threat. And when it comes, Leviathan steps forward with crocodile tears and a ready-made script: Only more government can protect you from the chaos.
How Big Government Raises the Stakes
There’s another reason political violence is escalating: government has swallowed so much of American life that the stakes of every election, every law, every bureaucratic decision now feel existential.
When Washington decides what kind of car you can drive, what kind of stove you can own, how your kids are educated, what speech is allowed online, what health care you can access, what job you can hold, and even what pronouns you must use—suddenly politics isn’t just about policy. It’s about survival.
The more Leviathan controls, the more losing means you lose everything. Your livelihood. Your freedom. Your way of life.
That’s why the anger is sharper. That’s why people feel desperate. That’s why radicals turn violent. Because Leviathan has made politics a zero-sum game. Either you win control of the machine, or the machine controls you.
In a free society, politics can be messy but rarely existential, because most of life operates outside the reach of government. In Leviathan’s America, politics is war by other means—because the state has invaded every corner of life, raising the stakes to unbearable levels.
The tragedy is that Leviathan creates the very conditions that guarantee bloodshed, then uses the bloodshed to justify its own growth.
The killing of Charlie Kirk is not just a tragedy. It is a warning. A warning that Leviathan is perfectly willing to see Americans kill each other if it means justifying its own expansion.
This is why our fight is not just about winning elections or passing bills. It is about dismantling the machinery that profits from division and thrives on bloodshed. Until Leviathan is destroyed, political strife will only escalate—because that is the outcome the machine is designed to produce.
America will have peace again only when Leviathan is stripped of its power and destroyed. Until then, every act of violence will be another rung on its ladder to total control.