All I've been saying is you can hate the man and still not cheer his murder. Anyone cheering his murder is wrong based on what our country is supposed to believe. Cheering murder is welcoming more of it. If you aren't one of the ones cheering, then good on you. But your argument seemed to indicate that you were because you seemed to be supporting it.
Again, as I've also said... people can cheer if they want... I mean it is a free country supposedly... but if the argument is its okay to cheer Charlie Kirk's murder because he said horrible things and believed it was okay for people to die for gun rights... then don't be surprised if the world continues to escalate and determine that it's also okay to kill people who cheer murder because that's just killing people who think it is okay to murder people you disagree with... and the violence escalates until nobody is left.
And as I concluded, I don't plan on being around to see how this crapfest of a world turns out anyway, so honestly, I'm losing the will to bother trying to help people towards a kinder path because if they don't want it and they plan on living in that world, then maybe I'm wrong and violence is the way of the future for those who will survive me.
People in this thread repeatedly go back to, "celebrating murder," which I keep responding to by saying, I'm not celebrating his murder (I'm against murder, Charlie thought it was an acceptable price). I'm celebrating that hubris and irony can still come back to bite people. With regard to him being a shit person, yeah, no lie I'm glad the world has one less of him. He's been living the dream by capitalizing on making life hell for people I love for many years, his very rhetoric used to make them feel they don't deserve to live and making spaces unsafe for them just because they exist. Should society avoid a slippery slope of celebrating political violence? Yeah (though again, go tell that to Charlie and his ilk). Are some people here doing that, even from behind a veneer of fact? Probably. I have no interest in speaking for or defending their views and this whole time, I haven't tried to.
But we're talking about a guy who everyone tried to tell for years about this exact outcome, and he didn't care. That he suffered the consequences of his beliefs for once instead of Black/Brown people, women, or lgbtq people in the end, is funny. Just like you're not asking me to like the guy, I'm not asking you to laugh at him. But there's nothing wrong with acknowledging the humourous irony that he is now a statistic against his own views.