15/09/2025
I saw some people comparing. So I conducted my own research! It’s important to remember that sheep tend to follow the herd.
Malcolm X and Martin Luther King Jr. challenged racial injustice, segregation, and systemic oppression. The Kennedy brothers, John F. Kennedy (JFK) and Robert F. Kennedy (RFK), advocated for civil rights, questioned entrenched power structures, and pursued policies that threatened certain political and economic interests.
Each of these figures symbolized larger movements, including civil rights, anti-war efforts, social reform, and justice. Their influential voices were powerful enough to shift public opinion and disrupt the status quo.
Those in power viewed them as threats to the existing systems. Their assassinations, regardless of who ultimately carried them out, occurred at critical moments when their influence was at its peak.
Their deaths solidified their legacies and, in many ways, strengthened their movements.
Malcolm X, MLK, JFK, and RFK were assassinated because they represented seismic social and political change.
Charlie Kirk doesn’t share that historic weight — his inclusion is political messaging, not historical fact.