Sunday, September 14, 2025

Democrats say "NO" to silent prayer for Charlie Kirk

House Democrats Shout Down Prayer Request for Assassinated Conservative Charlie Kirk on House Floor

There are moments that reveal the soul of a nation—not in grand speeches or historic votes, but in the small, instinctive reactions when tragedy strikes.

Throughout American history, even the fiercest political rivals have found common ground in moments of grief. Democrats and Republicans alike bowed their heads when Lincoln fell, when Kennedy was shot, when the towers came down. Prayer, that most basic human response to loss, has always transcended party lines in our halls of government.

We’ve watched this tradition erode slowly, like water wearing away stone. The secularization of public life has marched steadily forward, but most Americans assumed there were still some sacred boundaries. Surely, we thought, when death visits suddenly and violently, we can still come together as human beings. Surely the ancient practice of praying for the deceased remains beyond political contamination.

Speaker Mike Johnson called for a moment of silence. It was a gesture as old as Congress itself, a brief pause in the machinery of government to acknowledge a life cut short.

Democrats went wild with "NO, NO, No!"

Look, this wasn’t about Charlie Kirk, though his death was the catalyst. This was about something deeper and more troubling—the complete breakdown of shared humanity in our political discourse.

When you cannot even pray for your political opponent without triggering rage, when the most basic religious observance becomes a partisan flashpoint, we’ve crossed into dangerous territory.

Some Democrats tried to justify their outburst by pointing to a school shooting in Colorado that same day, as if tragedy is a zero-sum game where compassion for one victim somehow diminishes another.

Read more about the sad Democrats who have lost their humanity...

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

Something radically wrong with democrats.