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Alaskans rally to defend Tongass protections as Roadless Rule faces rollback

By: Grace Dumas, News of the North

Protesters gather at the Roadless Rule Rally September 13th, Photo by: Greg Knight/ News of the North

NOTN- Conservation group Southeast Alaska Conservation Council (SEACC) and local advocates like Juneau for Democracy are urging Alaskans to speak out against a federal proposal that could roll back long-standing protections for millions of acres in the Tongass National Forest, the world’s largest intact temperate rainforest.

The call to action culminated as Alaskans from Juneau to the organized village of Kake, rallied at the downtown whale statue, where they gathered in solidarity to oppose the Trump administration’s renewed attempt to rescind the federal roadless rule.

The roadless rule, adopted in 2001, bars large-scale commercial logging, mining, oil and gas development and road construction on 58.5 million acres of national forest land across the United States. In the Tongass alone, the protections cover 9.3 million acres of old-growth forest that support subsistence, recreation and some of the state’s most profitable industries.

“It was a rule process that involved the public for many years to get support, it was by far one of the biggest public participation events on a federal document in the history of the United States.” Said Nathan Newcomer, Federal Campaigns Manager of SEACC, “1.6 million people submitted comments on this rule-making process back in 2001, and the vast majority was support, it was 96% of Americans who wanted to see the Roadless Rule put in place.”

The Trump administration attempted to eliminate the rule once before, which triggered widespread public opposition before former President Joe Biden reinstated the protections.

The administration has now revived the effort, this time under an accelerated timeline.

A notice of intent was published in the Federal Register on Aug. 29, opening a public comment period of just 21 days, far shorter than most federal rulemaking processes. That window closes in less than a week.

“Initially it was only going to be 14 days that the public could comment on this document. That’s unheard of, It’s unprecedented. ” Said Newcomer, “They gave us an extra week, So they gave us 21 days.”

The window for public comment closes on September 19th.

Eagle Raven dancer Raelhiya Fulmer took part in the event. Photo: Greg Knight/ News of the North

Advocates say tribal voices have been sidelined in the process. The Organized Village of Kake, a federally recognized tribe, has led opposition to the rollback since the early 2000s. President Joel Jackson from the Organized Village Kake and President Mike Jones from the Organized Village of Kasaan joined Saturday’s rally in Juneau.

“We’ve been battling all this since time’s first contact,” said Áakʼw Ḵwáan Tribal spokesperson Fran Houston, “this was our land, this was our territory, and it was taken away from us. And now, hundreds of years later, here I am standing on the grounds of my ancestors, trying to protect what they had. we were forced to live in two worlds.”

“This is the home of the Tlingit, Haida and Tsimshian people, and to cut them out of the process is reprehensible.” Newcomer said, “I can tell the audience that the US Department of Agriculture was supposed to hold a tribal consultation online Zoom meeting with tribal governments, and then they canceled at the last minute and never rescheduled it. So what does that tell you?”

Áakʼw Ḵwáan Tribal spokesperson Fran Houston spoke at the event. Photo: Greg Knight/ News of the North

In a commentary article published by the Alaska Beacon, Ariel Hasse-Zamudio, public advocate with Juneau for Democracy and the Director of Alaska Energy Infrastructure, wrote, “For thousands of years, the Tongass National Forest has provided for the people and wildlife who have lived below its canopies and along its shorelines. The lands protected by the Roadless Rule are the delicate habitats that allow the rest of the forests to thrive. Resource development, while sometimes necessary, almost inevitably changes or destroys habitats essential to the flora and fauna humans depend on.”

Tourism and fishing, two industries closely tied to the health of the Tongass, contribute billions of dollars annually.

According to Newcomer and Hasse-Zamudio, commercial fishing generates more than $6 billion a year, while tourism adds more than $5 billion.

“Without this protection, the other parts of the forest that are able to be managed for logging and mining, won’t be healthy enough for us to even be able to use those resources.” said Hasse-Zamudio, “So this is also about the health of the entire forest, even the parts that are managed for resources.”

For now, the focus is on generating public comments before the deadline. As of this article, more than 86,000 comments have been submitted nationwide.

“It is a specific action everyone can take to elevate their voice and be a part of the democratic process, because it is work to be a citizen in a democracy, and this is how you participate.” Said Hasse-Zamudio.

Saturday’s protest included cultural performances, speakers from tribal governments and conservation groups, and a message of solidarity.

“Because we do live and work in this sacred land, and we need to stand up for it with one solid voice.” Said Newcomer.

Public comments can be submitted through the Federal Register under ‘Special Areas; Roadless Area Conservation; National Forest System Lands.’

For more information about the Roadless Rule, visit the Southeast Alaska Conservation Council website.

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Politics

Yes, this is who we are: America’s 250-year history of political violence

Punishment by tar and feather of Thomas Ditson, who purchased a gun from a British soldier in Boston in March 1775. Interim Archives/Getty Images

The day after conservative activist Charlie Kirk was shot and killed while speaking at Utah Valley University, commentators repeated a familiar refrain: “This isn’t who we are as Americans.”

Others similarly weighed in. Whoopi Goldberg on “The View” declared that Americans solve political disagreements peacefully: “This is not the way we do it.”

Yet other awful episodes come immediately to mind: President John F. Kennedy was shot and killed on Nov. 22, 1963. More recently, on June 14, 2025, Melissa Hortman, speaker emerita of the Minnesota House of Representatives, was shot and killed at her home, along with her husband and their golden retriever.

As a historian of the early republic, I believe that seeing this violence in America as distinct “episodes” is wrong.

Instead, they reflect a recurrent pattern.

American politics has long personalized its violence. Time and again, history’s advance has been imagined to depend on silencing or destroying a single figure – the rival who becomes the ultimate, despicable foe.

Hence, to claim that such shootings betray “who we are” is to forget that the U.S. was founded upon – and has long been sustained by – this very form of political violence.

A fuzzy photo of a large car with a woman leaning over in the back seat to help a slumped man next to her.
First lady Jacqueline Kennedy leans over to assist her husband, John F. Kennedy, just after he is shot in Dallas, Texas, on Nov. 22, 1963.
Bettman/Getty Images

Revolutionary violence as political theater

The years of the American Revolution were incubated in violence. One abominable practice used on political adversaries was tarring and feathering. It was a punishment imported from Europe and popularized by the Sons of Liberty in the late 1760s, Colonial activists who resisted British rule.

In seaport towns such as Boston and New York, mobs stripped political enemies, usually suspected loyalists – supporters of British rule – or officials representing the king, smeared them with hot tar, rolled them in feathers, and paraded them through the streets.

The effects on bodies were devastating. As the tar was peeled away, flesh came off in strips. People would survive the punishment, but they would carry the scars for the rest of their life.

By the late 1770s, the Revolution in what is known as the Middle Colonies had become a brutal civil war. In New York and New Jersey, patriot militias, loyalist partisans and British regulars raided across county lines, targeting farms and neighbors. When patriot forces captured loyalist irregulars – often called “Tories” or “refugees” – they frequently treated them not as prisoners of war but as traitors, executing them swiftly, usually by hanging.

In September 1779, six loyalists were caught near Hackensack, New Jersey. They were hanged without trial by patriot militia. Similarly, in October 1779, two suspected Tory spies captured in the Hudson Highlands were shot on the spot, their execution justified as punishment for treason.

To patriots, these killings were deterrence; to loyalists, they were murder. Either way, they were unmistakably political, eliminating enemies whose “crime” was allegiance to the wrong side.

An old portrait of an older man in a black robe.
In 1798, Henry Brockholst Livingston – later a U.S. Supreme Court justice – killed James Jones in a duel. It did not affect his career.
US Supreme Court

Pistols at dawn: Dueling as politics

Even after independence, the workings of American politics remained grounded in a logic of violence toward adversaries.

For national leaders, the pistol duel was not just about honor. It normalized a political culture where gunfire itself was treated as part of the debate.

The most famous duel, of course, was Aaron Burr’s killing of Alexander Hamilton in 1804. But scores of lesser-known confrontations dotted the decade before it.

In 1798, Henry Brockholst Livingston – later a U.S. Supreme Court justice – killed James Jones in a duel. Far from discredited, he was deemed to have acted honorably. In the early republic, even homicide could be absorbed into politics when cloaked in ritual. Ironically, Livingston had survived an assassination attempt in 1785.

In 1802, another shameful spectacle unfolded: New York Democratic-Republicans DeWitt Clinton and John Swartwout faced off in Weehawken, New Jersey. They fired at least five rounds before their seconds intervened, leaving both men wounded. In this case, the clash had nothing to do with political principle; Clinton and Swartwout were Republicans. It was a patronage squabble that still erupted into gunfire, showing how normalized armed violence was in settling disputes.

Gun culture and its expansion

A small, antique pistol.
One of the matching pair of derringer pistols used by John Wilkes Booth in the assassination of President Abraham Lincoln in 1865.
Bob Grieser/Los Angeles Times via Getty Images

It is tempting to dismiss political violence as a leftover from some “primitive” or “frontier” stage of American history, when politicians and their supporters supposedly lacked restraint or higher moral standards. But that is not the case.

From before the Revolution onward, physical punishment or even killing were ways to enforce belonging, to mark the boundary between insiders and outsiders, and to decide who had the right to govern.

Violence has never been a distortion in American politics. It has been one of its recurring features, not an aberration but a persistent force, destructive and yet oddly creative, producing new boundaries and new regimes.

The dynamic only deepened as gun ownership expanded. In the 19th century, industrial arms production and aggressive federal contracts put more weapons into circulation. The rituals of punishing those with the wrong allegiance now found expression in the mass-produced revolver and later in the automatic rifle.

These more modern firearms became not only practical tools of war, crime or self-defense but symbolic objects in their own right. They embodied authority, carried cultural meaning and gave their holders the sense that legitimacy itself could be claimed at the barrel of a gun.

That’s why the phrase “This isn’t who we are” rings false. Political violence has always been part of America’s story, not a passing anomaly, and not an episode.

To deny it is to leave Americans defenseless against it. Only by facing this history head-on can Americans begin to imagine a politics not defined by the gun.

The Conversation

Maurizio Valsania does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organization that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.

​Politics + Society – The Conversation

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Entertainment

Prince Harry Visits Wounded Soldiers in Ukraine

Reading Time: 2 minutes

Prince Harry has had a busy week.

As previously reported, the polarizing figure reunited with his father on Thursday after about 19 months, spending an unspecified time in London opposite King Charles.

But that wasn’t the only major stop Harry made on his trip overseas.

On Friday, the Associated Press confirms that this member of The Royal Family actually stopped over in Ukraine to visit with wounded service members who have been fighting that country’s ongoing battle with Russia.

Prince Harry, Duke of Sussex takes part in a panel discussion on how social action positively impacts mental health with four young people who are involved with The Diana Award, in Salisbury Square on September 11, 2025 in London, England. (Photo by Aaron Chown – Pool/Getty Images)

Specifically, Harry touched down in the capital city of Kyiv.

This visit marked the second time Harry has visited Ukraine since the start of Russia’s full scale invasion in 2022. He also made a trip to the western city of Lviv in April.

“We cannot stop the war but what we can do is do everything we can to help the recovery process,” Harry told the Guardian newspaper while on an overnight train to Kyiv.

The father of two has some experience in this area, of course.

Prince Harry, Duke of Sussex speaks with an award recipient at the annual WellChild Awards 2025, which celebrates the achievements and resilience of seriously ill youngsters and their families, at the Royal Lancaster Hotel on September 8, 2025 in London, England.
Prince Harry, Duke of Sussex speaks with an award recipient at the annual WellChild Awards 2025, which celebrates the achievements and resilience of seriously ill youngsters and their families, at the Royal Lancaster Hotel on September 8, 2025 in London, England. (Photo by Aaron Chown – Pool/Getty Images)

A British Army veteran who served in Afghanistan, Prince Harry is the founder of the Invictus Games, a Paralympic-style event designed to inspire military veterans around the world as they work to overcome battlefield injuries.

Ukraine is actually bidding to host these games in 2029.

Relatedly…

Harry, The Archewell foundation set up by Harry and his wife Meghan Markle announced this week that it had donated $500,000 to projects supporting injured kids from Gaza and Ukraine.

The money will be used to help the World Health Organization with medical evacuations and to fund work developing prosthetics for seriously injured young people.

(Photo by RAUL ARBOLEDA / AFP)

Earlier this year, meanwhile, Harry expressed hope that he and Charles could one day get on better terms following years of estrangement over his and Markle’s battle to restore security protection in the United Kingdom.

“There have been so many disagreements, differences between me and some of my family,” Harry told BBC in May.

“This current situation that has been on our ongoing for five years with regard to human life and safety is the sticking point. It is the only thing that’s left.”

Prince Harry Visits Wounded Soldiers in Ukraine was originally published on The Hollywood Gossip.

​The Hollywood Gossip

Categories
Entertainment

Taylor Swift to Give Evidence in Justin Baldoni, Blake Lively Suit

Reading Time: 3 minutes

Taylor Swift is wading into the ongoing legal war whether she likes it or not.

From the start, she seemed to want no part of Justin Baldoni’s courtroom campaign against Blake Lively.

However, she has agreed to some conditional testimony in the still-ongoing lawsuit.

Is she going to drag Lively in her deposition? We’ll find out very soon.

Taylor Swift and Blake Lively in February 2024.
Rapper Ice Spice, singer Taylor Swift, and actress Blake Lively prior to Super Bowl LVIII on February 11, 2024. (Photo Credit: Steph Chambers/Getty Images)

Taylor Swift will be getting involved in the legal battle, after all

According to Page Six, court documents show that Taylor Swift has agreed to provide evidence in Blake Lively and Justin Baldoni’s massive legal battle.

However, the singer’s deposition will be conditional.

Baldoni’s legal team must first persuade the court to extend the testimony deadline.

Justin Baldoni in August 2024.
Actor Justin Baldoni attends the New York premiere of “It Ends With Us” at at AMC Lincoln Square in New York, August 6, 2024. (Photo Credit: CHARLY TRIBALLEAU/AFP via Getty Images)

The report details that Baldoni’s attorney insisted to the judge that they had not requested “a blanket 30-day extension of the discovery cut-off date.”

Instead, the lawyer clarified:

“Wayfarer Parties requested an agreement solely to take the deposition of Taylor Swift during the week of October 20-25 due to Ms. Swift’s preexisting professional obligations.”

There is a reason for Swift’s reticence. Aside form the messiness of all, her new album comes out on October 3. She’s pretty busy hyping up The Life of a Showgirl until that date.

Taylor Swift in February 2025.
Taylor Swift attends the 67th Annual GRAMMY Awards on February 02, 2025. (Photo Credit: Matt Winkelmeyer/Getty Images for The Recording Academy)

What could she have to contribute?

Last winter, Justin Baldoni name-dropped Taylor Swift in his lawsuit, claiming that Blake Lively had effectively done just that by referring to Swift as her “dragon” and protector.

See, after having filed complaints about Baldoni, Lively sued him for sexual harassment and for retaliation.

There was an alleged smear campaign against her, as many may recall.

Baldoni’s massive lawsuit was thrown out in court, on the grounds that retaliatory lawsuits are illegal.

Justin Baldoni in October 2022.
Justin Baldoni attends Nights of the Jack friends and family nights at King Gillette Ranch on October 08, 2022. (Photo Credit: Andrew Toth/Getty Images for Nights Of The Jack)

It has been Baldoni’s contention that he and Lively clashed over creative differences while making It Ends With Us, stirring up drama that has not, in fact, ended with them.

Though they do not officially being their trial until spring 2026, it seems to be Baldoni’s contention that Lively concocted allegations against him in order to push her version of the film.

Or to keep him from publicly complaining about their creative differences? It’s unclear.

Regardless, Lively contends that he was unprofessional and inappropriate. And she is not the only woman to have filed a complaint about Baldoni or about his production company.

Blake Lively in April 2025.
Actress Blake Lively attends the New York special screening of “Another Simple Favor” at the Jazz at Lincoln Center in New York on April 27, 2025. (Photo Credit: CHARLY TRIBALLEAU/AFP via Getty Images)

What could she possibly have to say?

To be clear, Taylor Swift had a very limited involvement in the film itself.

She permitted the use of My Tears Ricochet. That’s it.

Neither Baldoni nor Lively seem to dispute that. But Baldoni is claiming that Lively used her friendship with Swift to intimidate him.

In October, we’ll find out if a deposition from Swift will tip the scales one way or the other.

But, ultimately, this doesn’t seem to be about her.

Taylor Swift to Give Evidence in Justin Baldoni, Blake Lively Suit was originally published on The Hollywood Gossip.

​The Hollywood Gossip

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Entertainment

Erika Kirk Spotted For First Time Since Shooting As She Accompanies Charlie Kirk’s …

Reading Time: 3 minutes

Erika Kirk clutched a rosary and fought back tears as she re-entered the public eye on Thursday.

As you’ve no doubt heard by now, Erika’s husband, Charlie Kirk, was shot and killed during a speaking engagement at Utah Valley University on Wednesday.

There have been reports that Erika was in the audience at the event where the shooting took place, but those claims remain unconfirmed.

Charlie Kirk (R) and and his wife Erika Lane Frantzve (L) on stage during the Turning Point USA Inaugural-Eve Ball at the Salamander Hotel on January 19, 2025 in Washington, DC.
Charlie Kirk (R) and and his wife Erika Lane Frantzve (L) on stage during the Turning Point USA Inaugural-Eve Ball at the Salamander Hotel on January 19, 2025 in Washington, DC. (Photo by Samuel Corum/Getty Images)

Erika Kirk makes first public appearance since husband’s death

Understandably, Erika has mostly maintained a low profile in the days since her husband was killed.

But yesterday, she rolled down the window of the SUV she was riding in so that she could wave to supporters in Arizona.

According to a report from the New York Post, a crowd of people waved American flags as the motorcade carrying Erika and her husband’s remains arrived at Phoenix’s Hansen Mortuary Chapel.

Erika was joined by Vice President JD Vance and his wife, Second Lady Usha Vance, who arranged to have Charlie’s remains transported from Utah to Arizona aboard Air Force Two.

Turning Point USA Founder Charlie Kirk is seen onstage at the Fiserv Forum during preparations for the Republican National Convention (RNC) on July 14, 2024, in Milwaukee, Wisconsin.
Turning Point USA Founder Charlie Kirk is seen onstage at the Fiserv Forum during preparations for the Republican National Convention (RNC) on July 14, 2024, in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. (Photo by Andrew Harnik/Getty Images)

Vance sang Kirk’s praises in a heartfelt X post shortly after news of the shooting went public:

“A while ago, probably in 2017, I appeared on Tucker Carlson’s Fox show to talk about God knows what. Afterwards a name I barely knew sent me a DM on twitter and told me I did a great job. It was Charlie Kirk,” the vice president wrote.

“Charlie was fascinated by ideas and always willing to learn and change his mind. Like me, he was skeptical of Donald Trump in 2016. Like me, he came to see President Trump as the only figure capable of moving American politics away from the globalism that had dominated for our entire lives,” he added.

“When others were right, he learned from them. When he was right–as he usually was–he was generous. With Charlie, the attitude was never, ‘I told you so.’ But: ‘welcome.’”

“Charlie was constantly calling and texting, checking on our family and offering guidance and prayers,” Vance continued in a separate post.

Turning Point USA Founder Charlie Kirk is seen onstage at the Fiserv Forum during preparations for the Republican National Convention (RNC) on July 14, 2024, in Milwaukee, Wisconsin.
Turning Point USA Founder Charlie Kirk is seen onstage at the Fiserv Forum during preparations for the Republican National Convention (RNC) on July 14, 2024, in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. (Photo by Andrew Harnik/Getty Images)

“After every event, he would give me a big hug, tell me he was praying for me, and ask me what he could do.”

Supporters mourn alongside Charlie Kirk’s widow

Erika — a ministry leader and podcast host with millions of Instagram followers — has received an outpouring of support following her husband’s death.

President Donald Trump and other public figures have offered their condolences to the mother of two.

As we previously reported, a 22-year-old Utah resident named Tyler Robinson has been arrested in connection with Kirk’s death.

We will have further updates on this developing story as new information becomes available.

Erika Kirk Spotted For First Time Since Shooting As She Accompanies Charlie Kirk’s … was originally published on The Hollywood Gossip.

​The Hollywood Gossip

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Entertainment

Tyler Robinson’s Discord Page, Alleged ‘Groyper’ Affiliation Spark …

Reading Time: 4 minutes

On Friday morning, President Donald Trump revealed that a suspect had been arrested in connection with the murder of Charlie Kirk.

Kirk was shot and killed on Wednesday during a speaking engagement at Utah Valley University.

By Thursday night, the FBI had apprehended 22-year-old Tyler Robinson in connection with the shooting.

Now, the media and general public are eagerly dissecting all available information about Robinson in search of a possible motive.

The mug shot of suspected Charlie Kirk shooter Tyler Robinson.
The mug shot of suspected Charlie Kirk shooter Tyler Robinson. (FBI)

What were Tyler Robinson’s political beliefs?

Robinson, a third-year student in Dixie Technical College’s electrical apprenticeship program, is registered as an “unaffiliated” voter, meaning he’s neither a Democrat nor a Republican.

Newsweek reports that Tyler’s parents, Amber and Matt Robinson, are both registered Republicans.

All signs point to a fairly standard middle-class, suburban upbringing, but there are indications that Robinson had become politically radicalized in recent years. But his beliefs are difficult to pin down.

Several X users have pointed to signs that Robinson was a fan of the “Groyper Army,” which Wikipedia defines as “a group of alt-right, white nationalist, and Christian nationalist activists led by Nick Fuentes.”

Many have speculated that Robinson wished to involve himself in the Groypers’ campaign against mainstream Republicans, but it’s too soon to arrive at any specific conclusions about the alleged shooters’ beliefs.

(X screenshot)

Fuentes is a controversial figure on the far-right, who, in the past, had criticized Kirk for being too moderate in his views and messaging.

In the wake of this week’s shooting, Fuentes took to social media to mourn Kirk and call for an end to political violence.

“I am devastated. It feels like a nightmare that we’ll never wake up from,” he wrote, adding, “The violence and hatred has to stop. Our country needs Christ now more than ever.”

On September 12, Fuentes urged the White House to release more information about Robinson:

“We need more from the Trump administration than what we’re getting,” he wrote on X (via Newsweek), adding:

“Release all the information about the assassin and his Discord contacts. Everyone must be investigated. Tell us the plan. How will the government stop this from ever happening again? Where is the leadership???”

CEO of Turning Point USA Charlie Kirk speaks on stage on the first day of the Republican National Convention at the Fiserv Forum on July 15, 2024 in Milwaukee, Wisconsin.
CEO of Turning Point USA Charlie Kirk speaks on stage on the first day of the Republican National Convention at the Fiserv Forum on July 15, 2024 in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. (Photo by Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images)

Again, it’s far too early to make any generalizations about Tyler Robinson’s ideology or the state of his mental health.

It’s human nature to try and sense of such a tragedy, but it might be impossible to do so even once all the facts are in (and at this point, we still know very little).

Robinson’s Discord activity receives scrutiny

Robinson’s roommate reportedly shared his Discord account with the authorities, but despite initial claims that Tyler posted about violent crimes on the streaming platform, a spokesperson for the company says no such content has been discovered.

“In the course of our investigation, we identified a Discord account associated with the suspect, but have found no evidence that the suspect planned this incident or promoted violence on Discord,” the rep tells TMZ.

Charlie Kirk, who founded Turning Point USA, speaks before former President Donald Trump's arrival during a Turning Point USA Believers Summit conference at the Palm Beach Convention Center on July 26, 2024 in West Palm Beach, Florida.
Charlie Kirk, who founded Turning Point USA, speaks before former President Donald Trump’s arrival during a Turning Point USA Believers Summit conference at the Palm Beach Convention Center on July 26, 2024 in West Palm Beach, Florida. (Photo by Joe Raedle/Getty Images)

“The messages referenced in recent reporting about planning details do not appear to be Discord messages. These were communications between the suspect’s roommate and a friend after the shooting, where the roommate was recounting the contents of a note the suspect had left elsewhere.”

Needless to say, there’s still a great deal that we don’t know about the alleged shooter.

What we do know is that as a young, middle-class, cisgender male, he fits the profile of the average mass shooter, a fact that might make his motives more difficult to discern.

“Not Black. Not Trans. Not Muslim. Not an Immigrant. Not a Democrat. Meet Charlie Kirk assassin Tyler Robinson. A white Christian, Conservative, Republican male with a gun … again,” actor Billy Baldwin wrote on X (according to TooFab).

“Charlie Kirk’s assassin Tyler Robinson, 22, killed him because he hated his opinions and thought he was a fascist. Yet ironically, HE was the fascist, killing someone to silence their opposing views. The woke left love to say ‘speech is violent.’ It’s not – violence is,” journalist Piers Morgan remarked on the platform.

Meghan McCain quickly racked up thousands of likes with a post that read simply, “Death penalty.”

We will have further updates on this developing story as new information becomes available.

Tyler Robinson’s Discord Page, Alleged ‘Groyper’ Affiliation Spark … was originally published on The Hollywood Gossip.

​The Hollywood Gossip

Categories
Entertainment

Erika King Issues Emotional Statement in Wake of Husband’s Assassination

Reading Time: 4 minutes

Erika King has broken her silence.

In a live stream via her husband’s official Twitter account September 12, the mother of two spoke out for the first time since Charlie Kirk was killed by an assassin in Utah this week.

“Charlie loved life. He loved his life, he loved America, he loved nature which always helped him closer to God,” the 36-year old said on Friday.

“He loved the Chicago Cubs and my goodness did he love the Oregon Ducks.”

(Photo by Samuel Corum/Getty Images)

Erika added that her late spouse also had a possesses of love for his family and his role as a husband and father.

“Most of all Charlie loved his children and he loved me with all of his heart and I knew that everyday. He made sure I knew that everyday,” she continued.

“Everyday he would ask me, ‘How can I serve you better? How can I be a better husband? How can I be a better father?’ … He was a such a good man.

“He still is such a good man. He was the perfect father. He was the perfect husband.”

Kirk, 31, was a podcast host and the founder of Turning Point USA, an organization best known for organizing young voters to get out and support Republicans running for office.

He was a close acquaintance of President Donald Trump.

CEO of Turning Point USA Charlie Kirk speaks on stage on the first day of the Republican National Convention at the Fiserv Forum on July 15, 2024 in Milwaukee, Wisconsin.
CEO of Turning Point USA Charlie Kirk speaks on stage on the first day of the Republican National Convention at the Fiserv Forum on July 15, 2024 in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. (Photo by Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images)

Charlie Kirk was shot during a speaking event for his American Comeback Tour at Utah Valley University in Orem, Utah, on Wednesday, September 10.

A 22-year old named Tyler Robinson has since been arrested for the act.

“It’s with a heavy heart that we, the Turning Point USA leadership team, write to notify you that early this afternoon, Charlie went to his eternal reward with Jesus Christ in Heaven,” the group said in a statement to employees and supporters on Wednesday.

Charlie and Erika shared a one-year son and a three-year old daughter.

Charlie Kirk, who founded Turning Point USA, speaks before former President Donald Trump's arrival during a Turning Point USA Believers Summit conference at the Palm Beach Convention Center on July 26, 2024 in West Palm Beach, Florida.
Charlie Kirk, who founded Turning Point USA, speaks before former President Donald Trump’s arrival during a Turning Point USA Believers Summit conference at the Palm Beach Convention Center on July 26, 2024 in West Palm Beach, Florida. (Photo by Joe Raedle/Getty Images)

Erika went on this evening:

“Here me when I say this: nobody is ever too young to know the gospel. Nobody. Nobody is ever too young to get involved with saving this beautiful country This country, my husband loved and still loves and nobody is ever to old either, there’s no age limit. I know my husband is still here.

“He’s watching over us. I don’t remember the last time I slept. I couldn’t sleep last night.”

She then addressed her late husband directly as follows:

“Charlie baby, Charlie I promise I will never let your legacy die baby I won’t. I promise I’ll make [your non-profit] Turning Point USA the biggest thing this nation has ever seen.

“Oh, Charlie I love you. I love you baby. Rest in the arms of our lord as he blankets you with the words I know your heart always strives to hear. Well done my good and faithful servant.”

US right-wing activist Charlie Kirk speaks on stage with President Donald Trump at America Fest 2024 in Phoenix, Arizona, on December 22, 2024.
Charlie Kirk speaks on stage with President Donald Trump at America Fest 2024 in Phoenix, Arizona, on December 22, 2024. (Photo by JOSH EDELSON/AFP via Getty Images)

Charlie married Erika — who just accompanied her husband’s casket to their home town — in 2021. She’s a former Miss Arizona USA.

In her new message, Erika also noted the challenge of navigating Charlie’s death as a mother… recalling speaking to the pair’s daughter, Gigi, the night before.

“When I got home last night Gigi, our daughter, just ran into my arms and I talked to her and she said, ‘Mommy i miss you’ and I said I miss you too baby and she goes, ‘Where’s daddy?’ How do you tell a 3 year old? She’s 3.

“And I said, ‘Daddy loves you so much baby he’s on a work trip with Jesus so he can afford your blueberry budget.”

Earlier this year, Erika also paid Charlie tribute on the occasion of America’s birthday.

“Today, I thank God for freedom. I thank God for the gift of this nation,” she wrote. “And I thank God for a husband who, day in and day out, gives everything he has to defend it. Happy Birthday, America. May we never take you for granted. I love you @charliekirk1776.”

Erika King Issues Emotional Statement in Wake of Husband’s Assassination was originally published on The Hollywood Gossip.

​The Hollywood Gossip

Categories
Politics

Blue states shunned the National Guard. Tennessee governor is taking a different approach.

In naming Memphis the next destination for National Guard deployment, President Donald Trump has opened a new front in his crusade against cities — one that relies on cooperation from Republican governors.

So far, Trump has targeted crime in cities within states led by Democrats, deploying the Guard to Los Angeles and Washington, and threatening action in Illinois, Maryland and Oregon. But launching troops into one of deep-red Tennessee’s largest cities marks a shift for the White House, alleviating legal hurdles and strengthening the president’s efforts as he increasingly relies on the military for policing.

And Memphis may just be the start — GOP governors have shown a willingness to lean on the Guard to aid in crime fighting and deportation efforts. Before it was declared the next target on Friday, Trump had suggested he would dispatch the Guard to New Orleans — which GOP Gov. Jeff Landry celebrated. Arkansas Gov. Sarah Huckabee Sanders this week detailed the Guard to assist in immigration enforcement in Little Rock and Fayetteville. In Texas, Gov. Greg Abbott has routinely sent the Guard to police the border, and in June authorized 5,000 troops in anticipation of protests against deportation raids.

Tennessee Republicans view the entrance of the Guard in their state as an opportunity to sharpen their attacks on Democrats over crime, an issue that remains one of the GOP’s biggest strengths.

“Why these blue state governors would act like dumbasses and not welcome the federal help to reduce the crime for their own citizens is beyond me,” said Tennessee Sen. Brent Taylor, a Memphis-area Republican who has long requested federal intervention in his city. “When it comes to the crime issue, blue state governors are as useless as a milk bucket under a bull.”

But by teaming with Republican governors, Trump will “be able to demonstrate to the rest of the country, in particular to the blue state governors, that your opposition kept your crime rate high in your cities,” he said.

Trump’s decision to go to a red state also offers more flexibility in how the National Guard is mobilized — and allows him to avoid some of the legal resistance he has faced with Democratic leaders. The White House and governor’s office have yet to decide how resources will be deployed in Memphis, but with Lee’s buy-in, the National Guard could remain under the state’s authority and avoid the constraints of the Posse Comitatus Act, which which bars the military from enforcing domestic laws without explicit permission from Congress, said Christopher Mirasola, an assistant law professor at the University of Houston Law Center.

A White House official touted the president’s federal takeover in Washington, and pointed to Memphis’ crime statistics as a key driver in the president’s decision — as well as the fact that he has the backing of some local and state Republicans who welcomed Trump’s announcement. Violent crime in Memphis has risen in the last decade, but like other large American cities, rates have decreased since pandemic-era spikes. The city’s police department said in a release this week that murder is at a six-year low, aggravated assault at a five-year low and sexual assault at a 20-year low.

“The president’s action in Memphis and what he has talked about in cities — dangerous cities around the country — is not about pushing back against a Dem narrative. It’s not about scoring political points,” said the official, granted anonymity to speak candidly. “It is something he has talked about for many, many years, dating back to when he first ran for president in 2015.”

The official called Memphis “a very dangerous city” adding, “so, of course, having the buy-in of local officials is great.”

On Friday, after Trump derided Memphis as “deeply troubled,” Republican Gov. Bill Lee said he was working with the White House on a plan to combat crime that leverages “the full extent of both federal and state resources.”

“This is politically smart of Trump, insofar as it lets him accomplish two goals at once. First, he gets to take away an opposition talking point — that crime is higher in many cities in red states than in DC or Chicago. He can say ‘Look, I take crime seriously everywhere,’” said Rosa Brooks, a Georgetown University law professor who served as a counselor to the undersecretary of defense for policy under President Barack Obama. “Second, he continues to normalize the once unthinkable use of uniformed military personnel in American cities.”

But even with the state’s Republicans on board, the deployment sets up a clash with local Democratic leaders. Memphis Mayor Paul Young said at a press conference on Friday that he did not request the National Guard, and he doesn’t believe it’s an effective way of driving down crime: “However that decision has been made — my commitment is to make sure strategically that we make sure this happens in a way that truly benefits and strengthens our city.”

Other Tennessee Democrats point to Trump’s military takeover of Memphis as an extension of his policies to stoke racial divisions and to make an example of the perceived ineptitude of cities that have a high number of Black elected officials.

If he was interested in responding to his base, he would be in Utah,” state Rep. Justin Pearson said. “Immediately after Charlie Kirk is killed there’s a National Guard deployment to one of the Blackest cities in the United States of America?”

Pearson argued sending National Guard troops exposes the incompetence of Republicans who control all levels of power across the state.

“If indeed the problem is so bad here in Memphis, it shows the failure of our Republican-led statehouse and our governor…to do their jobs well,” added Pearson, who was briefly expelled from chamber after protesting in support of gun safety two years ago. “If all the money that is going to be spent on this political charade would instead be given to poor people in our cities and in our communities, we wouldn’t have crime problems the way that we do.”

Others say Republicans, who enjoy a governing trifecta and a supermajority in both chambers of the statehouse, have overseen the steady roll back of state and federal resources that could help local officials tamp down on crime. This includes federal gun violence prevention funding that was cut under the Trump administration and the relocation of the FBI’s main field office last October across the state to Nashville during the Biden administration, despite Memphis ranking high on the FBI’s list of violent crimes per capita.

“I’m fearful [of] where this is going, and that we will not get the promise of zero crime,” Shelby County Mayor Lee Harris said at a press conference Friday. “Send FBI agents and law enforcement agents who can get guns off of the street. Don’t send armored vehicles.”

Democratic leaders in New York and Illinois are bracing for Trump to follow through on his threats to deploy the Guard in New York City and Chicago. In Chicago, as ICE’s presence has grown in recent weeks, National Guard troops have yet to be deployed. Gov. JB Pritzker believes Trump may yet change his mind ahead of the midterms.

New York Gov. Kathy Hochul has insisted a federal deployment of the Guard is unnecessary given the progress made addressing crime. Hochul deployed the National Guard late last year to New York City’s subways, a move intended to.make New Yorkers feel safer when riding the nation’s largest mass transit system.

New York State Homeland Security and Emergency Services Commissioner Jackie Bray said city officials have been meeting multiple times a week to discuss preparations if Trump directs his attention to New York City next.

“My message as it has been from day one is: ‘We’ve got this,’” Bray said. “The NYPD is the best law enforcement entity in the country. It would be an insult to them if the federal government thinks they can do a better job.”

Nick Reisman and Shia Kapos contributed to this report.

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‘A uniquely dangerous time?’: The aftermath of Charlie Kirk’s killing | The Conversation

‘A uniquely dangerous time?’: The aftermath of Charlie Kirk’s killing | The Conversation

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‘A uniquely dangerous time?’: The aftermath of Charlie Kirk’s killing | The Conversation

In the aftermath of the killing of conservative organizer Charlie Kirk, Politico’s Global Editor-In-Chief John Harris observes that there are few, if any, national figures who are spreading a message of unity.

We’re at a point, he says, “where almost every news event very quickly does become politicized, and people view events as … weapons or shields in a nonstop political argument.”

Kirk, 31, was shot and killed while he was speaking at an event at Utah Valley University. Kirk was among the nation’s most prominent conservative organizers, founding Turning Point USA when he was just 18 years old and growing it into a nationwide youth movement with hundreds of chapters.

Harris joined POLITICO’s Dasha Burns to discuss Kirk and the impact of his life and death on American politics in the latest episode of “The Conversation.”

“He was a larger-than-life figure in Republican politics,” Burns said, describing him as “controversial” and “provocative” but noting his commitment to debate. “I interviewed Charlie multiple times and our exchanges were sometimes intense. I pressed him, he pushed back, but in the end he was always cordial. Always willing to engage,” she said.

His killing is the latest in a string of acts of political violence — from the attempted assassination of then-candidate Trump in Butler, Pennsylvania, last summer to the killing of Melissa Hortman, the former Democratic speaker of the Minnesota house, and her husband in June.

Harris notes that while there have been periods of violence in America — the Oklahoma City bombing in 1995, among others — in the past, national leaders have at least sought to share messages of unity in the aftermath. While the current political moment has taken us away from that messaging, Harris notes that our climate of divisiveness is out of step with the majority of Americans.

“I think a lot of people do wish for something better,” he said, “I would think almost every person wishes for something different than the horrific violence that we saw.”

The full interview with Harris is available this weekend on The Conversation wherever you get your podcasts.

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