Rocky Mountain Voice

Universities silent after Charlie Kirk martyred for free speech on a college campus

By Evita Duffy-Alfonso | Commentary, Fox News

Campus free speech concerns grow after conservative commentator Charlie Kirk’s assassination and the deafening silence from academic leaders

When a man is publicly executed for his views on a university campus, one would expect institutions of higher education to respond immediately — if only to confront the chilling effect such violence unleashes. One would expect them to reassure students that their campus remains a place for free inquiry. One would expect them to guarantee that future speakers of every political persuasion are not only welcome but safe from mortal threat. Yet following the gruesome assassination of conservative icon Charlie Kirk, universities have remained largely silent.

This silence is a far cry from the deafening chorus that followed George Floyd’s death in 2020, when student inboxes overflowed with moralizing emails from university presidents, provosts, deans and entire departments. At my alma mater, the University of Chicago, Dean of Students Jay Ellison declared Floyd “murdered” before any court had ruled; Provost Ka Yee C. Lee pronounced Floyd’s death “racially motivated”; and President Robert J. Zimmer claimed “true freedom and equality” were out of reach in America.

Departments piled on, too: the English Department limited graduate admissions to only those in Black studies; the Physics Department ordered participation in a day-long work stoppage in solidarity with the Black Lives Matter riots; and the History Department pledged allegiance to the Marxist, fraudulent Black Lives Matter organization. Not one of these statements condemned the riots destroying American cities — instead, they sanctified them as “justice.”

Ironically, the University of Chicago brags about its “Chicago Principles,” which commit the school to open debate and free inquiry, and its “Kalven Report,” which declares the university’s institutional neutrality on political and social issues to protect that freedom. Don’t be fooled. These commitments are marketing brochures for donors, not the reality on campus.

What is more relevant to the University of Chicago: the death of George Floyd, which became a rallying point for riots and extreme racial politics, or the public killing of an innocent man on a campus — an act that will inevitably chill university free speech nationwide? The answer is obvious.

It’s not just Chicago. This week, The Federalist contacted Princeton, Harvard, Yale, Penn, Cornell, Brown, Columbia and Dartmouth, as well as a host of other major institutions. Every single one had issued grandiose statements about Floyd. Not one had a word to say about Charlie’s assassination.

Charlie would have predicted this double standard. It’s why he dedicated himself to college campuses; he understood the heart of the left’s movement beats in the academy — an institution that has been steadily conquered by Marxism.

Universities were once entirely Christian and rooted in the pursuit of knowing God and cultivating virtue. Today’s woke curricula peddle fake grievance disciplines such as fat studies and queer studies and actively question whether “truth” exists at all.

Marxism, by its very nature, is hostile to truth (God) and to peace. To Marxists, there is no divine authority — only power struggles between the haves and have-nots. Raw power itself becomes the closest thing to a god, and violence is always justified as the engine of “progress.” That’s why radical trans activists feel righteous when they attack Christian schoolchildren they brand as oppressors, and why BLM rioters felt justified burning cities. In their worldview, violence isn’t wrong — it’s necessary.

Educating young people in knowledge, but not in virtue, is a recipe for disaster. The 2020 summer of rage — and the glorification of accused UnitedHealthcare CEO-killer Luigi Mangione — shows this in stark relief.

This is why Charlie Kirk is a martyr. He died because he dared to speak truth, informed by his Christian faith, in the very temples where lies are taught. His presence on campus was a rebuke to the indoctrination machine, and his murder was the curriculum made flesh.

READ THE FULL COMMENTARY AT FOX NEWS

Editor’s note: Opinions expressed in commentary pieces are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the opinions of the management of the Rocky Mountain Voice, but even so we support the constitutional right of the author to express those opinions.

FD863768-0ACF-495E-9D21-2EF784DFFA6B[1]

Join us at RMV's Freedom Festival

Click Here for Tickets!

This will close in 0 seconds