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Home»News»Global Free Speech»Charlie Kirk’s murder: Use words to counter speech you don’t like, not bullets
Global Free Speech

Charlie Kirk’s murder: Use words to counter speech you don’t like, not bullets

News RoomBy News Room9 months agoNo Comments5 Mins Read1,602 Views
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Charlie Kirk’s murder: Use words to counter speech you don’t like, not bullets
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In 2013, as part of research for my book on Chinese youth, I sat down with one of the country’s most notorious young nationalists. Rao Jin was known for running a website, then known as Anti-CNN.com, that was against the American 24-hour news network (as a proxy for the West). Ideologically we could not have been further removed. But his views were (and still are) popular and I needed to understand how he arrived at them. We shared tea and despite our differences we spoke calmly. It was very civil.

That word civil is not one we can use right now for the USA, where the murder of Charlie Kirk and the response to it expose just how far we’ve drifted from basic norms of decency. The right-wing influencer and Donald Trump ally was shot and killed, aged 31, while speaking at a university in Utah. He was silenced, literally, though by who and for what reason we can only guess right now.

It was a horrifying display and because some people on social media seem to have no boundaries, I have accidentally seen, when scrolling, the moment it happened. I wish I hadn’t.

Horrifying too has been the commentary. Hours after the shooting, President Trump posted on Truth Social that his “administration will find each and every one of those who contributed to this atrocity and to other political violence” and that the “radical left political violence has hurt too many innocent people”. Trump’s words could be seen as an invitation to retribution. They’re full of assumption – that he was killed by someone from the left who opposed his views – and they’re inaccurate. Claims that violence is a liberal issue, echoed by Elon Musk and many others too since yesterday, are rubbish, a smack in the face of facts. Political violence happens on the extreme edges of the left-right spectrum. It was just two months ago that a Democrat lawmaker and her husband were killed.

The USA has also always been marked by such violence. I have first-hand experience of it. On a visit to LA in 2002 I had to duck behind a bus stop after two men sparred in a queue at Starbucks, leading to one pulling a gun on the other outside. Beyond my own experience are the well-known examples – the Kennedys, Lincoln, Martin Luther King Jr, Huey Long, Harvey Milk – to name just a few.

That said, it’s clear that in today’s USA a violent form of authoritarianism is growing, feeding off an angry, deeply polarised population and aided by lax gun laws. Kirk’s murder is sadly just another piece of the puzzle, something we are trying to understand at Index and to counteract.

While Trump’s comments are terrifying in their implication, the remarks of those who either defended the shooter, diminished the horror or delighted in a form of schadenfreude were very troubling too. It is one thing to call out Kirk for his views. Many were vile and at the limits of what might be considered acceptable speech. It is another to badmouth a man in his dying moments, or after, with the implication being that he got what he deserved. Some have even responded to our post on Bluesky in such a way. It’s strange that I have to say here that Index will never condone violence.

As is the case with Rao Jin, I am sure that if Kirk and I had ever met we’d have vehemently disagreed with one another. Is it so hard though for people to hold two truths at once – that you can abhor someone’s views and abhor their murder too? Is it so hard to listen to people across the spectrum, to use words to counter speech you don’t like, not bullets?

The murder might peel open the USA to expose its fault lines like no other in recent years. It comes in the same week that the country’s leading free speech organisation, Fire, issued their annual report on free speech on campus, in which they said “the atmosphere isn’t just cautious – it’s hostile”. According to the report a majority of students surveyed opposed their college hosting six hypothetical speakers with controversial views and that students of every political persuasion showed “a deep unwillingness to encounter controversial ideas”. There’s a bitter irony here in the report’s timing.

The dust will settle on Kirk’s murder. The person behind it, perhaps already arrested, will likely be named. Their motivations will hopefully be aired. Maybe it was nothing to do with his views. As someone speculated on our Bluesky post, “what if he was having an affair with the wife of an army sniper?” Maybe he was.

Still, the broader context and point remains. We have a president in power who is not in favour of free speech for all and whose comments essentially encourage political violence, likely because it is expedient – it makes coming after ideological enemies easier. At the same time we have too many people who condone or downplay violence when it concerns those who they don’t agree with. But violence begets violence. Left unchecked it will come for us all and no one’s views, no matter how confronting, should make us lose sight of that.

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Photo by: Stephen Barnes/Medical/Alamy UK news this week is dominated by a damning report led by senior midwife Donna Ockenden that reveals how more than 500 mothers and babies were harmed or died at maternity units in Nottingham. This isn’t the first scandal Ockenden has investigated. A few years back terrible failings were revealed in Shropshire hospitals run by the Shrewsbury and Telford NHS Trust where 201 babies and nine mothers died.  We spoke to Ockenden for the magazine and she repeated this: “women aren’t listened to”. Another common thread was cover-up. Secrecy is not a one-off, it’s a pattern, wrote Martin Bright when he reported on the Shropshire scandal for Index. As Bright said, “this is not a historical story; it is an ongoing crisis”. Maternity scandals happen not only in Britain but all over the world. Last year’s protests in Morocco were ignited after eight women died in a maternity ward in Agadir because of severe medical neglect. In Egypt last week Omnia Sweidan, a former resident physician in obstetrics and gynaecology at Alexandria’s El-Shatby University Hospital, wrote a Facebook post detailing a series of abusive incidents faced by women at Alexandria’s Al-Shatby Hospital. It was read and shared by tens of thousands. Within 24 hours of posting, instead of the government declaring an investigation, security forces arrested Sweidan. While she was apparently later released, she’s been accused of spreading false news and misusing social media. She could end up in jail. Meanwhile, Afghanistan has one of the highest maternal mortality rates in the world – the figures of deaths and injuries are rising, but to what no one really knows. The Taliban won’t publish the data, probably to cover-up the true numbers. I’ve navigated maternity services myself in the UK. I’ve generally had good experiences and I’m very grateful to the NHS. But my experiences have not been uncomplicated – my daughter very nearly died. What saved her, I’ve been told, were a few factors – my race (white), my class (middle), where I live (London) and the fact that I relentlessly badgered those at my local hospital for weeks on end saying things didn’t feel right. Let me be clear here though: one shouldn’t have to be a dogged white Londoner to get good medical care. And a recent health committee report revealed terrible inequalities faced by people who are members of ethnic minorities, stating that “[B]abies that are Black or Black British Asian or Asian British have a more than 50% higher risk of perinatal mortality”. At Index we typically work on stories where dissidents take on the powerful: leaders, oligarchs and tech bros. The victims of maternity care scandals might not appear the same. But there is much that unites them. At the end of the day if the response you get from a doctor or nurse to a basic medical request is a shrug or a sneer, your free speech is being violated. If the systems view calls for accountability as dissent that must be silenced, then they are censoring. We grew up being told we’re lucky, that childbirth was one of the leading causes of death before the advent of modern medicine. For many of us that’s true. Just not all of us. That’s a travesty demanding urgent attention – in Nottingham and beyond. READ MORE

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