Charlie Kirk, a prominent conservative figure, was assassinated on Wednesday while speaking at a college campus in Utah.
At the time of this writing, we have no clear information on the motives of the assassin. Given the rise in ideological and political violence in America, it’s not unreasonable to think Kirk was murdered for his views. Whatever the motive, it should prompt us to have a rational conversation about politically motivated uses of force in our country.
Politically motivated uses of force are a categorical assault on individual rights and on the American method of persuasion over force. Americans should always condemn it—no matter who perpetrates it.
The assassination attempts on President Trump are two of the prominent recent instances of political violence in this country. There’s also the shooting of lawmakers and their spouses in Minnesota in June of this year, the attack on Paul Pelosi, the assassination of Brian Thompson, the CEO of UnitedHealthcare, and the murders of two Israeli embassy staffers in D.C. earlier this year, among others.
But the evil of the use of force for ideological or political reasons is not limited to murders or attempted murders. The massive destruction of property during the BLM protests in 2020, the Charlottesville rally in 2017, the Jan. 6 riots and the several destructive pro-Hamas protests are instances of political violence, too.
This violence is not the exclusive province of either Democrats or Republicans. It’s the province of tribalists and the uncivilized.
The use of force is the abdication of reason. When a person engages in the use of force, they are breaking from civilization and the core values this country was founded on.
America, and civilized society more broadly, is a massive ideological achievement which happened precisely because we’ve let ideas flow, and good ideas take hold. In an America true to its core principles, we don’t shoot our political or ideological opponents like cowards. We don’t destroy property in order to make a point. We use our speech to disagree with our opponents. We challenge them in the marketplace of ideas. We try to persuade, not coerce. We use words, not bullets. That’s the American way. Anything different from that, now and in the past, is an appalling deviation from our core values. Such deviations have occurred repeatedly throughout American history, and we should learn from those mistakes knowing that they lead to destruction.
Exercising and protecting our rights never requires attacking the rights of others. No cause can ever justify the use of force. It doesn’t matter what cause the perpetrators support. It doesn’t matter if one agrees or disagrees with their cause in principle. When force starts, support for the aggressor must end, and condemnation must begin.
We all have the responsibility of condemning and ostracizing those who engage in violence, no matter their views. Part of the massive damage that tribalism (the blind, unthinking allegiance to a group) has done to America and the West is that too many people try to rationalize or play down the use of force when it’s someone from their “tribe” perpetrating it—or when it’s perpetrated against the opposite “tribe.” These include those who disgustingly celebrated the murder of Brian Thompson and all but beatified his alleged assassin, and those who made light of and mocked the attack on Pelosi’s family and the Minnesota lawmakers.
We should also never respond to illegitimate uses of force in kind. Kirk’s assassin, as well as anyone else who engages in barbaric acts, should be condemned, face the ultimate legal consequences for their actions and be prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law. The way we fight the uncivilized mob is not by lowering ourselves to its level— it’s by using the tools we’ve devised to deal with illegitimate uses of force in a civilized manner. Americans should resist the tribalist pull to do anything different, or to demand of their government that it uses force illegitimately against others. If we’re against the use of force, we must be against it across the board.
Like many other Americans, I’m extremely concerned about the direction this country is headed. During this dark time, let’s remember what got us here: perverse, anti-human, anti-civilization ideas that seek to destroy this amazing achievement that is America. But let’s also remember what brought about this achievement in the first place: the ideas of freedom, reason and individual rights—the ideas that side with humanity and reality. The enemies of reason use force to shut down ideas because they know how powerful they are.
Let’s use these ideas to steer our country back in the right direction and never abandon our minds to force like the tribalists do.
Agustina Vergara Cid is a columnist for the Southern California News Group and Young Voices contributor. Follow her on X @agustinavcid