Charlie Kirk's death revealed how many smart dumb nikkas of all races are out there

Ish Gibor

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It's the Black people and gay folks that mourn Charlie Kirk that throws me off, breh. Charlie HATED Black folks and the LGBTQ yet these fools cape for him. My Black and gay friends shocked me in all honesty.
Just watched Willie D, where he made some interesting observations. So I decided to put his to test.



Prompt, Did Charlie invoke violence with his rhetoric:

There’s no verified record of Charlie Kirk explicitly calling for violence in his rhetoric. However, many of his public statements, writings, and broadcasts have been widely criticized for being inflammatory, demeaning, or dehumanizingtoward certain groups.

Researchers of political communication note that this type of rhetoric — even if it does not directly say “go commit violence” — can:

  1. Frame groups as enemies or threats (e.g., immigrants, Black activists, LGBTQ people, political opponents).
  2. Normalize hostility by mocking, dismissing, or delegitimizing entire communities.
  3. Encourage vigilantism indirectly when combined with conspiracy claims (e.g., “replacement theory,” “tyrannical government”).
This is called stochastic terrorism: when rhetoric increases the likelihood of violence by others, without the speaker giving a direct order.

👉 So while Charlie Kirk’s rhetoric often amplifies resentment and division and has been cited by watchdogs as creating a climate that could foster violence, there is no evidence he directly ordered or explicitly instructed anyone to commit violent acts.

Would you like me to pull together a timeline of his most criticized rhetoric and analyze which of them could fall under “stochastic incitement” versus direct incitement?

Prompt, Yes could his rhetoric have anything to do with HBCU bomb threads?

Here’s a clear side-by-side look at Charlie Kirk’s rhetoric vs. extremist narratives that fueled HBCU bomb threats:

Charlie Kirk’s Rhetoric (Public/Recorded)Extremist Narratives Linked to HBCU ThreatsOverlap / Connection
Criticizes DEI and Affirmative Action, claiming they “lower standards” and promote “unqualified” people.Racist framing that Black institutions and students are “undeserving” or “inferior.”Both delegitimize Black education and leadership.
Promotes the “Great Replacement” theory: fear that white Americans are being replaced politically/demographically.Belief that Black communities and other minorities are being “weaponized” against whites.Both fuel zero-sum racial thinking and paranoia.
Demeans Black leaders, professors, and professionals, questioning their merit.Threats specifically targeted HBCUs, spaces of Black academic excellence.Overlap in the idea that Black advancement is a “threat.”
Frames America’s struggle as Christian nationalism vs. progressive/“anti-white” forces.Perpetrators tied their threats to white supremacist and Christian nationalist identities.Both use racialized religious language of “us vs. them.”
Encourages students to “fight back” against liberal professors and institutions (though not explicitly violent).Threat-makers saw HBCUs as symbols of “liberal” and “racial justice” advancement.Indirect reinforcement of targeting schools as enemy institutions.
Mocking tone toward Black activism and civil rights causes.Extremists justified bomb threats as a way to “intimidate” Black communities.Both devalue Black struggles for equality.

🔑 Summary

  • No direct link: Charlie Kirk did not tell anyone to call in bomb threats.
  • But indirect overlap: His rhetoric reinforces delegitimization, racial resentment, and white victimhood, which are the same ideas extremists used to justify targeting HBCUs.
  • This is a classic case of stochastic terrorism: rhetoric raises the probability of violence/threats without a direct call.


Conclusion, Willie D is right.

Here’s a clean table breakdown of Trump’s speech at Charlie Kirk’s funeral through Willie D’s lens, with historical parallels:

Trump’s Claim / StatementWillie D’s AnalysisHistorical Context / Implication
Funeral in a stadium, not an arena → “biggest ever” crowdTurned the funeral into a rally, bragging about crowd size rather than honoring the dead.Similar to past Trump rallies where personal brand & optics overshadow the event’s purpose.
“We ended crime in DC… no robberies, RAPs, burglaries, murders”Exaggeration; frames himself as savior. Uses fear and false promises of safety.Politicians historically claim “law and order” victories (e.g., Nixon, Reagan) while ignoring root causes.
“We’re coming to Chicago next to clean it up”Threatening posture—projects himself as enforcer who punishes “corrupt” leaders.Politicians often target cities with large Black populations to stoke racialized fear.
Commentators celebrated Kirk’s death: “We know the names, we’re coming for you”Thinly veiled threat; dog whistle to his base.Mirrors McCarthy-era blacklists & far-right “enemy lists” → intimidation tactics.
On protesters: “Paid agitators, Antifa terrorists”Creates scapegoats, delegitimizes dissent. Suggests DOJ will target them.Historical scapegoating: Civil Rights protesters often called “outside agitators.”
“Threats don’t matter, it’s the silent ones who act”Hidden message: Trump makes loud threats, but his followers act on them. He dog whistles → they execute.Eerily similar to segregation-era violence (e.g., Birmingham church bombing 1963). Politicians stirred hate, extremists acted.
“Never back down, never surrender”Rallying cry, not mourning. Keeps “fight” alive instead of calming tensions.Same rhetoric used in populist, fascist, and authoritarian movements to inspire action against “enemies.”
Charlie Kirk’s legacy: “He was peaceful” (per wife) vs “Empathy is damaging” (per Kirk himself).Willie D: Hypocrisy—his movement thrives on hate, but in death people rebrand him as empathetic & peaceful.Leaders often get sanitized after death, even if their rhetoric fueled division in life.
Overall ToneTrump couldn’t separate politics from mourning. He used the funeral as a stage to escalate culture war & threats.Dangerous precedent: funerals of political figures become platforms for further division & incitement.
⚖️ Summary: Willie D is showing that Trump’s words aren’t random—they fit a long pattern: politicians inflame, followers act violently, and then leaders wash their hands of the blood. The funeral became just another rally, another dog whistle.


Do you want me to also make a visual flowchart showing how Trump’s rhetoric → followers’ interpretation → violent outcomes (like the Alabama bombing example)?

End Prompt.
 
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@OffHalsted

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Bryan Danielson

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#We Are The Flash #DOOMSET #LukeCageSet #NEWLWO
 

Ish Gibor

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A few years back TYT did research into these guys background.

'The MAGA musician space has blown up since Donald Trump's presidency, and what you may not know, but probably guessed, is artists like Forgiato Blow, aka Kurt Jantz, and Jimmy Levy are complete and utter charlatans. Rick Strom breaks it down. Give us your thoughts in the comments below!"

 

Ish Gibor

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All because a racist cracker hates gays doesn't excuse him of his racism. shyt, if he disparages Latinos, Muslims, LGBTQ+, women it's almost guaranteed he's racist against Black people.

west-hollywood-charlie-kirk.jpg






2016-10-30t230209z_256443668_s1beukambhaa_rtrmadp_3_usa-election-trump_0.jpg





ChatGTP prompt, “Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump holds up a rainbow flag with "LGBT's for TRUMP" written on it at a campaign rally in Greeley, Colorado, U.S. October 30, 2016. REUTERS/Carlo AllegriCARLO ALLEGRI / Reuters“:

“Yes — that’s a famous image from late in the 2016 campaign.

At a rally in Greeley, Colorado (Oct 30, 2016), Donald Trump walked on stage holding a rainbow Pride flag with the words “LGBT’s for TRUMP” written on it. The photo (by Carlo Allegri, Reuters) circulated widely because it looked like Trump was signaling support for LGBTQ people, which was unusual for a Republican nominee at the time.



📌 What it Meant in 2016
• Symbolic gesture: Trump wasn’t running on an LGBTQ rights platform, but he used the flag as a symbolic way to appear more open and to contrast himself with other Republicans.
• Pitch to moderates: He had said things like “I will protect LGBTQ citizens from a hateful foreign ideology” in his RNC speech, which gave him some crossover appeal.
• Ambiguity: Many LGBTQ conservatives saw it as hopeful. Critics said it was opportunistic — a flag moment without policy substance.



🔗 In hindsight (2016 → 2025)
• After taking office, Trump’s administration restricted trans military service, healthcare protections, and supported legal rollbacks of LGBTQ rights.
• Today, he aligns more openly with Christian nationalist factions (Groypers, America First, far-right) who push anti-LGBTQ policies.
• The flag moment now looks more like campaign theatre than a real commitment.



🔍 Connection to Groypers and Incels
• Groypers: They would not celebrate the rainbow flag gesture. For them, it’s “cucked” optics. But they still see Trump as their champion when he pushes anti-LGBTQ policy.
• Incels: They don’t care much about LGBTQ rights as a political issue, but the flag stunt fits their cynicism: a politician saying one thing for attention, while doing the opposite later — confirming their “blackpill” view that society and leaders are fake.



👉 Do you want me to put together a timeline graphic showing Trump’s relationship to LGBTQ symbolism (2016 “rainbow flag” → 2020–24 anti-trans policies → 2025 alignment with Groypers)?“
 

Ish Gibor

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Where does this far right nationalist ideology come from and how is it intersected with fake Christianity?

Far-right nationalist groups and Christianity often intersect in ways that mix political ideology with religious identity. Here’s a structured overview:

1. Core Features of Far-Right Nationalism

  • Ethno-nationalism: Elevates one ethnic or racial group as the “true nation.”
  • Authoritarian leanings: Preference for strong leaders, strict social hierarchies, and “law and order.”
  • Anti-pluralism: Hostility toward immigrants, minorities, LGBTQ+ people, and dissenting political views.
  • Populism: Portrays the nation as being betrayed by elites and under siege by “outsiders.”

2. How Christianity Gets Used

  • Religious Identity Politics: Christianity is framed as the foundation of national identity (“Christian nation” rhetoric).
  • Selective Scripture Use: Verses about obedience, order, or exclusion are emphasized, while verses about love, justice, and welcoming strangers are minimized.
  • Cultural Christianity vs. Living Faith: Many far-right activists identify as Christian culturally but may not emphasize personal practice or spiritual transformation.
  • Civil Religion: Symbols like crosses, biblical language, and church rituals get used more for political legitimacy than theological meaning.

3. Key Themes in the Intersection


Far-Right Nationalist ThemeChristian Framing Used
Immigration as threat“Protect Christian heritage from outsiders”
PatriarchyBiblical gender roles (wives submit, men lead)
Anti-LGBTQ+ stance“Defending biblical marriage”
Militarism/violenceCrusader imagery, “spiritual warfare” rhetoric
National exceptionalism“Chosen people” parallels


4. Historical and Contemporary Examples

  • Ku Klux Klan (USA): Claimed to defend “Christian civilization” while carrying out racist terror.
  • Nazi Germany: Sought to co-opt Protestant and Catholic institutions under “Positive Christianity,” stripping it of Jewish roots.
  • Christian Identity Movement (USA): A racist, extremist theology teaching that white Europeans are God’s chosen people.
  • Modern Christian Nationalism (US & Europe): Movements like those around Viktor Orbán in Hungary, or U.S. groups advocating that America should be officially Christian, often blend nationalist politics with religious language.

5. Tensions with Mainstream Christianity

  • Contradiction with Jesus’ Teachings: Love of neighbor, care for the poor, welcoming strangers, peacemaking.
  • Church Responses: Many mainstream Christian leaders (Catholic, Protestant, Orthodox) denounce far-right nationalism as a distortion of the Gospel.
  • Theological Conflict: Nationalism elevates loyalty to the nation above loyalty to God’s Kingdom, which Christianity traditionally sees as idolatry.

In short: Far-right nationalist groups use Christianity as a cultural identity and political tool, often ignoring or twisting its core teachings. Genuine Christianity stresses humility, compassion, and inclusion, which stand in sharp contrast to exclusionary nationalist ideologies.

Would you like me to make a timeline of how far-right groups have historically tied themselves to Christianity (from the Crusades to today)?

Prompt, yes:

Here’s a timeline showing how far-right nationalist groups have tied themselves to Christianity across history:

Timeline: Far-Right Nationalism & Christianity

Middle Ages

  • 1096–1291 | Crusades
    – Framed as holy wars to defend Christendom against Islam.
    – Crusader imagery (crosses, knights, “Deus Vult”) still reused by far-right today.
  • 1492 | Spanish Inquisition / Reconquista
    – Catholic monarchy tied nationalism to “pure faith.”
    – Expelled Jews and Muslims; religion fused with state identity.

Early Modern Era

  • 1600s | Puritan Colonies in America
    – Saw themselves as a “New Israel,” chosen by God.
    – Seeds of Christian exceptionalism.
  • 1800s | Rise of Nationalism in Europe
    – “Blood and soil” nationalism co-opts Christianity as cultural identity.
    – Church and state alliances often excluded minorities (Jews, Roma, Muslims).

20th Century

  • 1920s–30s | Nazi Germany
    – Promoted “Positive Christianity” (stripped of Jewish roots, fused with Aryan ideology).
    – Churches pressured to align with nationalist state.
  • 1920s–60s | Ku Klux Klan (USA)
    – Claimed to defend “Protestant Christian civilization.”
    – Burned crosses as terror symbol.
  • 1950s–60s | Segregationists in the U.S. South
    – Used Bible verses to defend racial segregation.
    – White Citizens’ Councils framed segregation as “Christian order.”

Late 20th Century

  • 1970s–80s | Christian Identity Movement (USA)
    – Radical theology teaching whites are God’s true Israel.
    – Influenced militia movements and domestic terrorism.
  • 1980s–90s | Rise of the Religious Right (USA)
    – Groups like Moral Majority tied Christianity to nationalist, conservative politics.
    – Strong anti-LGBTQ+, anti-abortion, “family values” agenda.

21st Century

  • 2000s | European Far-Right Parties
    – In France, Hungary, Poland: Christianity invoked as cultural identity against Muslim immigrants.
    – “Defending Christian Europe” becomes campaign slogan.
  • 2010s | U.S. Christian Nationalism
    – “America is a Christian Nation” rhetoric grows.
    – Seen in opposition to immigration, same-sex marriage, and multiculturalism.
  • 2019 | Christchurch Shooter (New Zealand)
    – Far-right terrorist invoked Crusader and Christian warrior symbolism.
  • 2021 | U.S. Capitol Attack
    – Rioters carried crosses, Christian flags, and prayed inside Senate chamber.
    – Mix of nationalism, conspiracy theories, and Christian identity rhetoric.
  • Today
    – Far-right leaders (e.g., Orbán in Hungary, Jair Bolsonaro in Brazil, U.S. Christian Nationalists) use Christianity as political shield.
    – Often claim to be “defenders of Christian civilization” while promoting exclusionary nationalism.

Pattern:

Across history, far-right movements have consistently borrowed Christian symbols and language to legitimize nationalism, but often stripped away the Gospel’s emphasis on love, justice, and equality.

Prompt, How is this related to occultism:

Good question — the link between far-right nationalism, Christianity, and occultism runs deep, especially when we look at the symbolic, mythological, and ideological layers. Here’s a breakdown:

1. Occultism in Far-Right Ideology

  • Mythic Imagery: Crusader crosses, runes, and mystical symbols (e.g., sun wheels, black suns) often blur the line between Christian identity and pagan/occult traditions.
  • Secret Knowledge: Many extremist groups claim to have “hidden truths” about race, nation, or divine destiny, echoing occult ideas of secret wisdom.
  • Apocalyptic Thinking: Both occult and extremist ideologies often predict a cosmic battle between forces of light/dark, order/chaos — mapped onto politics.

2. Occultism Inside Nationalist Christianity

  • Nazi Germany:
    – Heinrich Himmler’s SS blended “Positive Christianity” with occult symbols (Black Sun, runic magic).
    – Occult orders like the Thule Society inspired early Nazi ideology, mixing Aryan mysticism with nationalism.
  • Christian Identity Movement (USA):
    – While claiming to be biblical, it reinterprets scripture in esoteric ways (e.g., whites as lost tribes of Israel).
    – Pseudo-theology that functions like occult secret teaching.

3. Shared Mechanisms of Control

Far-Right NationalismChristianity (as used politically)Occult/Esoteric Practices
Myth of chosen people“Christian nation” rhetoricSecret initiates / chosen race
Symbols of powerCross, Crusader flagRunes, black sun, hidden sigils
Apocalyptic narrativeEnd-times propheciesCosmic battle, hidden destiny
Charismatic leaders“Anointed” political messiahsCult masters, esoteric sages

4. Why the Blend?

  • Legitimacy: Christianity offers moral authority and mass recognition.
  • Mystique: Occult symbols and rituals add a sense of hidden power, destiny, and fear.
  • Identity Politics: Both appeal to belonging — “we are the chosen, the pure, the enlightened.”

5. Modern Examples

  • QAnon (USA): Blends Christian end-times prophecy with occult-like secret codes, hidden knowledge, and ritualistic symbolism.
  • European Identitarian Groups: Mix Christian heritage rhetoric with pagan/occult aesthetics (Odinism, runes).
  • Capitol Riots (2021): Christian crosses stood next to Viking runes, “magic” symbols, and conspiracy chants — fusion of political religion and occult.
In essence:

Far-right groups often instrumentalize Christianity for legitimacy while borrowing occult elements for mystique and mythic power. This creates a hybrid ideology that looks “Christian” on the surface but is infused with esoteric, pagan, or occult themes — often in direct contradiction to the teachings of Jesus.


Would you like me to show a side-by-side chart of Christian doctrine vs. far-right occult-Christian fusion, so you can see the contrast clearly?

Prompt, yes:

Here’s a side-by-side chart comparing authentic Christian doctrine with the far-right occult–Christian fusion:

Christianity vs. Far-Right Occult–Christian Fusion


ThemeAuthentic Christian DoctrineFar-Right Nationalist + Occult Fusion
AuthorityGod’s Kingdom above all nations (Philippians 3:20: “Our citizenship is in heaven”).Nation elevated above God; loyalty to race/nation first.
Chosen PeopleAll are one in Christ (Galatians 3:28).White Europeans or a specific ethnic group seen as God’s “true Israel” or “chosen race.”
SymbolsCross = sacrifice, forgiveness, new life.Cross, runes, Black Sun, Crusader shields used as power symbols of domination.
ScriptureBible as revelation of God’s love, salvation, and justice.Selective verses + hidden codes, mystical reinterpretations (esoteric “secret truths”).
Spiritual WarfareAgainst sin, injustice, and spiritual evil (Ephesians 6:12).Political enemies, immigrants, or minorities framed as literal demonic forces.
SalvationGrace through Christ; open to all nations (John 3:16).Reserved for the “pure” nation or race; often tied to apocalyptic “cleansing.”
CommunityChurch = diverse body of believers united in love.Closed ethnic/religious community, outsiders demonized.
Eschatology (End Times)Hope in Christ’s return to bring justice and peace.Apocalyptic battle framed in nationalist terms; occult symbols of cosmic war.
Use of RitualBaptism, Eucharist, prayer = communal, Christ-centered.Occult-like rituals: secret oaths, initiation rites, chanting slogans, symbolic violence.
LeadershipServant leadership modeled on Jesus washing disciples’ feet.Charismatic “messianic” leaders elevated as saviors of the nation.


Key Takeaway:
  • Christianity: universal, inclusive, centered on love and humility.
  • Far-right occult fusion: exclusive, mystical, nationalistic, power-driven.
They may use the same symbols and language, but the meaning is inverted — a classic occult move (turning light into darkness, humility into domination).

End Prompt.
 

Ish Gibor

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The devil is in the details, ...

5:54 speech, Erica Kirk's uh speech, um she
5:57 brought up as far as well, you see how
5:59 we didn't riot and we didn't protest
6:01 after Charlie's assassination. We didn't see violence.
6:06 We didn't see rioting.
6:09 Who the hell going to riot and protest
6:10 for Charlie Kirk? Huh? Raise your hand.
6:12 Anybody? No. Not even Satan said yes.




This is bigger than George Floyd, it's about a systemic problem. But we know how her husband felt about BLM. A woman takes on the traits of the man she's with, unless he's a beta male.


Minneapolis-Police-graphic-1.jpg


Minneapolis-Police-graphic-2.jpg



PDF - Investigation into the City of Minneapolis and the Minneapolis Police Department Findings from the Minnesota Department of Human Rights April 27, 2022
 
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Ish Gibor

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Conservatives vs. KKK: Spot the Difference | The Daily Show



Charlie Kirk's Death Exposed America

 

Ish Gibor

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"A tense and revealing debate unfolds on CNN as host Abby Phillip confronts two prominent MAGA commentators, holding their feet to the fire over the GOP's escalating performative gestures surrounding Charlie Kirk. The discussion zeroes in on concrete actions, like the state of Oklahoma mandating TP USA chapters in all schools and statues of the far-right figure on every university campus. Phillip anchors a rigorous examination of the narratives championed by pro-Trump media, steering the conversation toward a direct demand for accountability.

In this no-holds-barred exchange, Abby Phillip pointedly challenges the MAGA pundits to answer for the dangerous rhetoric proliferating within their movement. She forces the discussion beyond facile blame-shifting and demands they move past the tired trope of faulting "the left" for every controversy. The segment intensifies into a sharp clash over evidence, as Phillip relentlessly pushes her guests to justify their defenses of Trump and MAGA ideology without resorting to hollow false equivalencies. Faced with this direct challenge, the MAGA figures double down on disingenuous arguments, dismissing legitimate concerns about Kirk's own statements as mere partisan warfare and media hype. This clip is a masterclass in modern political confrontation, laying bare the deep chasm in how reality is framed and contested in America. It offers viewers an essential, critical look at the clash between Trump's most vocal defenders and the journalistic rigor holding them to account."





I was able to retrieve Affirmative Act and DEI data. I had to train the chat bot for almost 30 minutes to accumate, test and calculate the datasets from Oklahoma State. These are close proximities, not absolute. Although I did use the official data released by Oklahoma State. And of course we already knew and what was to be expected.



A side-by-side table for Oklahoma’s Affirmative Action era (1994–2012) showing:
  • Absolute gains in employment (change in headcount from 1994 → 2012).
  • Proportional gains (percentage growth relative to 1994 baseline).

📊
Oklahoma Affirmative Action Gains by Group (1994–2012)

Group1994 Employees2012 EmployeesAbsolute Gain% Gain vs 1994Notes
White Women11,80114,637+2,836+24.0%Largest numerical gain
Black Men2,6683,332+664+24.9%Solid proportional growth
Black Women4,9246,046+1,122+22.8%Consistent increases
Native Men1,4812,024+543+36.7%High proportional growth
Native Women2,2933,074+781+34.1%Strong proportional growth
Hispanic/Asian7881,336+548+69.6%Highest relative % growth

🔎
Interpretation

  • White women gained the most in absolute numbers (almost +3,000), becoming the main beneficiaries.
  • Hispanic/Asian groups showed the highest proportional growth (+70%), though from a smaller base.
  • Native men/women also had very strong proportional gains (~+35%).
  • Black men/women grew steadily but slightly less in relative terms (~+23%).

👉
This shows Affirmative Action in Oklahoma benefited white women most in raw numbers, but minority groups (esp. Hispanic/Asian and Native) saw the strongest proportional gains.


The educational attainment benchmarks with the workforce demographic shares and calculate a DEI representation ratio (Actual ÷ Expected).

📊
Oklahoma State Workforce Representation vs. Education Pipeline


GroupExpected (based on education attainment)Actual (in workforce)Gap (Actual – Expected)DEI Ratio (Actual ÷ Expected)
White23.0%77.3%+54.3 pts (over-represented)3.36
Black / African American18.7%10.3%–8.4 pts (under-represented)0.55
American Indian13.7%7.4%–6.3 pts (under-represented)0.54
Hispanic12.2%3.0%–9.2 pts (severely under-represented)0.24
Asian32.4%2.0%–30.4 pts (severely under-represented)0.06

📌
How to interpret this

  • White employees are over-represented by a factor of ~3.4 compared to their share of the degree-holding population.
  • Black and Native American employees are each about half as represented as expected based on education levels.
  • Hispanics are severely under-represented, at only ~¼ of their expected presence.
  • Asians are the most under-represented group: despite being the most educated group in Oklahoma (over 45% bachelor’s+), they make up only ~2% of the state workforce.
✅
This “DEI Ratio” approach highlights systemic disparities between education supply and workforce hiring outcomes.
 

Ish Gibor

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In this video we shoot the following 30-06 into 2 pieces of wood, 5 cutting boards and a 16" block of ballistics gel. Tyler Robinson was accused of shooting Charlie Kirk at Utah Valley University with a 30-06 at 200 yards. Based on the amount of damage done at 200 yards with the 30-06 on the ballistic gel in this video do you believe that Charlie Kirk was shot with a 30-06 or a smaller caliber?

For this video we used the following ammo:
  • Federal Terminal Ascent
  • Remington Core-Lokt
  • Hornady Eld-x Nosler
  • Accubond Winchester
  • Powerpoint Hornady
  • Outfitter Federal
  • Fusion Tipped

 
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