When Did Celebrating Murder Become “Normal”?

4 days ago
822

It’s wild watching people gloat about Charlie Kirk’s death online — laughing, mocking, treating it like some kind of sport. But then the shock sets in when their employers see the posts and suddenly… they’re out of a job.

It’s the ultimate FAFO moment. Accountability has a funny way of showing up when you least expect it. Actions online carry real-world consequences, and it turns out cheering on someone’s murder isn’t the kind of “free speech” most bosses will tolerate.

Here’s the bigger question though: what does it say about our culture when people think it’s okay to publicly celebrate violence against someone they disagree with politically?

Should losing your job be the price of crossing that line — or is it just the bare minimum? Repost if you think accountability should never go out of style.

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