You know, when it comes to Erica Kirk, this is the same person who allowed someone to record her standing over Charlie Kirk’s casket. That was not our business. Not even remotely. That should have remained private.

And yet, here we are—watching people turn that grief into content, making hundreds of thousands of dollars episode after episode, attacking people I love, accusing them of being “in on something.”

No. Just no.

The paramedics who responded at UVU were not part of some plot. The first responders weren’t actors in a cover-up. These were real people doing their jobs in the middle of a real tragedy.

What’s happening now isn’t investigation. It’s exploitation.

There’s a difference between asking hard questions and dragging everyone connected to a death into a conspiracy for clicks. And that line has been crossed. Repeatedly.

Grief is not evidence. Trauma is not proof. And private moments—especially moments involving death—are not currency for public speculation.

At some point, this stops being about truth and starts being about attention. And that should concern everyone watching.