When a politician dies, it often becomes a national moment of reckoning that goes beyond personal grief. It’s been a week since the assassination of Charlie Kirk, the 31-year-old founder of Turning Point USA, and people are still shocked and sad as more information comes to light about his last moments.

Kirk was speaking to more than 3,000 people at Utah Valley University on September 10 when tragedy struck. While he was in the middle of answering a question about gun violence, someone on a rooftop shot him in the neck. The wound cut off important arteries, which instantly silenced him and threw the rally into chaos.

Security quickly got to him and put him in a waiting car. Frank Turek, a close friend and mentor, was one of the people who rushed to the hospital with him. He later talked about the desperate attempt to save him. Turek said, “Charlie was literally a son to me,” so it was not only a political tragedy for him.

Because Kirk was so tall, rescuers had to leave the car door open while he lay across the back seat. Turek remembered doing CPR and telling Kirk to fight for his life while security put pressure on the wound. But it was too late by the time they got to Timpanogos Regional Hospital.

Turek said, “His eyes were fixed.” “He was already with Jesus.” He finds comfort in the belief that Kirk’s death was quick and painless.

Medical experts agreed with that conclusion, saying that the terrible injury would have knocked him out in less than half a second, leaving him unaware or afraid.

For supporters, the symbolism is strong: Kirk died while talking about the very thing that killed him. Friends and family, like his wife Erika, have paid tribute to him and said that his movement will live on.

A car racing through city streets with its door open has become a defining image of Kirk’s last journey. It shows how much his friends cared about him and how fragile life is, making sure that his legacy will live on in both politics and the humanity of his last moments.

By Star

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