Notes from the Inkpot

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You Don’t Kill Someone for Their Ideas: What Charlie Kirk’s Murder Means for Classrooms

You Don’t Kill Someone for Their Ideas: What Charlie Kirk’s Murder Means for Classrooms

Charlie Kirk’s murder is an extreme reminder of where unchecked intolerance can lead. His wife, his children, and a crowd of students witnessed an act meant to silence, when what they expected was debate. As teachers, we can’t solve political violence — but we can shape how young people learn to disagree. In our classrooms, the habits we model and the structures we build matter: separating the person from the idea, listening before responding, refusing caricatures, and treating disagreement as an invitation, not a threat. This isn’t glamorous work. It won’t stop every act of hate. But it gives students practice in something the wider world has forgotten — how to live with difference without resorting to violence.

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