I have mentioned hyperbole and exaggeration, but it is probably more of an outright lie that liberals were celebrating Charlie Kirk's death.
I was nonetheless seeing multiple assertions that had happened.
This was happening just after Robert Mueller died, and the president was predictably horrible:
https://www.cnn.com/2026/03/29/us/mueller-trump-fbi-presidents-standoff
While it's not worth a lot, there are conservatives who still have a sense of decorum. Because of that, they realized this behavior was not good, but they still didn't want to be too critical of him, which is dangerous.
Much like leftists, the easiest path is to criticize liberals. This played out in two main ways:
- This is nothing compared to how liberals will celebrate when Trump dies.
- What about how they celebrated when Charlie Kirk died?
Laying aside the first one for now, I don't really remember anyone celebrating.
It was not uncommon to point out that he had not been a really good person or a fighter for free speech and open debate.
It was not uncommon to point out that various right-wingers had angry posts about Kirk, most notably Nick Fuentes, though there were others.
After appearing to fall in line that MAGAs should not be pressuring the government for the release of the Epstein Files, Kirk went back on that:
https://www.newsweek.com/jeffrey-epstein-files-update-charlie-kirk-trump-message-2099999
It was a fairly mild rebellion, but there were people who perceived it as a lack of support and were angry.
That could have been a motive in the shooting, but with the current FBI's incompetence, I am not sure how definitive an answer we will get.
Anyway, after the shooting, right-wingers who had posted violent or critical things about Kirk removed them, then started trying to get ordinary people who had posted criticisms of Kirk fired.
https://www.huffpost.com/entry/charlie-kirk-critics_n_68c5a9b5e4b0efc9da5fea41
It's the circle of life.
As people were discussing it, a lot of people pointed out his flaws. That conflicted with the quick lionization of Kirk, as they pointed out that he had not really been that big a deal, with a somewhat limited audience. People who had never heard of him before were now heartbroken at his loss.
There was a lot of hyperbole and exaggeration in that.
From my point of view, Charlie Kirk was the Campus Crusade for Christ version of Steven Crowder. I would see his face and have to run through my head "nope, not Matt Walsh, not Gaetz... Wohl? Oh, Kirk."
That may sound mean, but is it celebrating?
Those critical posts tended to state over and over again that Kirk's flaws did not mean that he deserved to be murdered.
Someone replied to one of the posts with the accusations of celebration, with exactly that point: posts saying that Kirk sowed division or lied or targeted naive young students then said he didn't deserve to die.
The answer (that I should have bookmarked) was a rebuttal that most of those posts reversed the order.
He didn't deserve to die, BUT... then it's a party.
I mention the lack of intellectual honesty a lot, but we should note that it accomplishes different things.
Sometimes the purpose is continuing to avoid self-examination and to not let logic or perspective interfere, but part of that is also turning the people you disagree with into monsters.
What kind of insecurity do you need to have that vilification of others is necessary?