
First in a five-part series on what it would actually take to mean it when you say “I am Charlie Kirk.”
There’s a scene in The Delta Force (1986) that captures something most people have forgotten. Terrorists hijack a plane and demand the Jewish passenger come forward. Father O’Malley, played by George Kennedy, stands up, walks forward. Abdul, the terrorist, says, “I did not call you.” The priest replies, “You called for all the Jews. I’m Jewish, just like Jesus Christ. You take one, you gotta take us all.” He was making a declaration: you meant to isolate them, but I’m stepping into their place.
That was the spirit of “I am Charlie Kirk” when people first said it after his assassination in September 2025. It meant: you thought you’d silence him, but I will carry on his work. I am the next Charlie Kirk.







