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“I saw on FOX and I saw on others some of the quotes that people made that was so horrible,” Trump said. “And you say, where do these people live? Where do they come from?”
That question wasn’t about geography. It was about morality.
The former president couldn’t fathom how anyone could cheer the murder of a political opponent, let alone someone as young and passionate as Charlie Kirk.
“They said horrible things about the death of Charlie,” Trump continued. “And I guess we just have sick people out there.”
What made Trump’s comments even more powerful was the way he honored Kirk’s contributions to the conservative cause.
Trump revealed that Kirk played a key role in convincing him to join TikTok—a move that changed the game for Republican outreach.
“Charlie actually recommended it to me. He said, you should go on TikTok,” Trump recalled. “And I went on TikTok, and I really hit big. I mean, I think I had more views than anybody else in the world, actually.”
That strategy helped Trump reach millions of young voters—an area where Republicans have historically struggled.
“I got tremendous, you know, millions and millions of young kids. Nobody’s ever seen anything like it,” Trump said.
Kirk’s work wasn’t just about politics. It was about shaping a movement that spoke directly to the next generation of conservatives.
While tributes for Kirk poured in from across the country, the vile comments celebrating his death revealed something much darker.
“Even if you didn’t like them, you can’t say the kind of things that they say,” Trump said, visibly disgusted.
When political hatred reaches the point where people cheer the assassination of a 31-year-old leader, we’ve crossed into dangerous territory.
Trump’s question—”where do these people come from?”—should make every decent American stop and think.
Charlie Kirk’s murder wasn’t just an attack on one man. It was an attack on the entire America First movement.
And the fact that some people treated it like a joke shows how far the radical Left is willing to go to dehumanize conservatives.
Trump was right to call them “sick people.” That wasn’t political rhetoric. It was the cold, hard truth about what happens when hate takes over.
The America First movement lost a rising star. But as Trump made clear, his memory—and the principles he fought for—will not be silenced by those who celebrate political violence.
For millions of conservatives, Trump’s words were a reminder: no matter how ugly things get, the fight for freedom, decency, and basic human respect isn’t over.