From AND Magazine:
Charlie was killed by a single bullet fired by one man. More broadly, though, he was murdered because he opposed the ongoing Marxist revolution in this country. That revolution has been underway now for many years. It is well funded, and it is well on its way to gaining control over our institutions, our government, and our citizenry.
Like all Marxist revolutions, this one seeks to destroy the non-governmental institutions that can organize resistance to its agenda – the family and the church. It also seeks to legitimize the use of violence in pursuit of its goals. Marxists do not support free speech. They murder it.
The actors that pop up on the screen in pursuit of revolutionary aims are often lone figures of no individual significance: Young men adrift in society and going nowhere fast. Black clad, blue-haired “transgender” students of medieval art history at a liberal arts school no one has ever heard of. Radicalized members of a minority group convinced that every problem they encounter is the fault of the system.
Make no mistake, though. This revolution is well-financed, directed from above, and drawing support from every enemy of the United States on the planet.
Take a look at what has been learned already about the players behind the shooter of Charlie Kirk. To what extent Tyler Robinson acted at the direction of these groups and individuals remains unclear at this moment. What is obvious, though, is that he, like so many of his peers, was surrounded by individuals and groups, well funded by national-level organizations, who want to radicalize America’s youth and burn the country as it exists to the ground. (Read more.)
From John Robb at Global Gorillas:
In the wake of Charlie Kirk’s assassination, Donald Trump has declared Antifa a terrorist group, likely using its status as an international organization/network as the means for doing so. To gain some insight into what this means, let’s revisit my August 2019 Report, “Street Fights,” on the fractured maelstrom of German politics during the late 1920s and early 1930s. Here are some parallels to our current situation.
A discredited status quo and the decline of nationalism. Networked politics has weakened the status quo (from media to institutions), like how rampant inflation undermined the status quo in Germany.
A decline in nationalism due to a globalist policy and policy disasters (Iraq, COVID, immigration, etc.) has led to the rise of groups and identities that are competitive with the state (primary loyalties, etc.). Germany experienced a similar decline and identity fragmentation following its defeat in World War I.
The rise and fall of Antifa. It was during this time that Antifa (Antifaschistische Aktion) and its predecessor, the Rot Front (Rot Frontkampferbund, translated as Red Front Fighters), were founded and eventually banned by the state due to terrorism attributed to them.
Now, let’s dig into the report. (Read more.)


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