{"id":614,"date":"2025-09-20T16:00:00","date_gmt":"2025-09-20T16:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/globaltalentholding.com\/?p=614"},"modified":"2025-09-23T13:18:10","modified_gmt":"2025-09-23T13:18:10","slug":"charlie-kirk-assassination-videos-leave-fallout-for-schools-parents","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/globaltalentholding.com\/index.php\/2025\/09\/20\/charlie-kirk-assassination-videos-leave-fallout-for-schools-parents\/","title":{"rendered":"Charlie Kirk assassination videos leave fallout for schools, parents"},"content":{"rendered":"
Graphic videos of Charlie Kirk\u2019s assassination<\/a> spread like weeds over social media last week in a way that it made it difficult for the youngest online to avoid the bloodshed. <\/p>\n From autoplay on X to friends sharing the footage in group chats, both young people who loved and hated the conservative leader saw the videos in ways that are leading to renewed calls for online safety legislation and lessons from schools on how to handle graphic social media content. <\/p>\n Kelly Benjamin, a mother of two who has worked in media and technology for years, said she found out about Kirk\u2019s assassination through her daughter, a sophomore in high school, who came home announcing the news and saying that she already watched it happen. <\/p>\n \u201cAs a parent, hearing your child say that they’ve already witnessed someone dying that day is horrific. And, naturally, I worry about the implications of kids seeing that kind of violence and being desensitized to it, being traumatized by it and it just being sort of available instantaneously,\u201d said Benjamin, whose past employers include E&E News.<\/p>\n The videos were almost inescapable<\/a> for anyone with a social media account a week ago Wednesday, as several angles circulated online of Kirk getting shot in the neck, with some versions even slowed down for taking in detail. <\/p>\n Cell phone bans at schools kept at least some students from seeing the slaying right away, but younger Americans were Kirk’s target audience<\/a>, and many if not most social media users saw his fatal shooting before class the next day.<\/p>\n \u201cFirst, all of us must denounce political violence unequivocally. Second, we must commit to off-ramps and de-escalation as [Utah] Gov. Spencer Cox \u2014 and every former U.S. president \u2014 has urged. It doesn\u2019t help that social media platforms allowed the graphic video of Charlie Kirk\u2019s killing to circulate like wildfire, courtesy of the same algorithms responsible for damaging kids\u2019 mental health,\u201d said Randi Weingarten, president of the American Federation of Teachers. <\/p>\n Kimberley Cantu, a superintendent for the Mansfield Independent School District in Texas, has experience getting her students through traumatic experiences, including a 2021 school shooting. Cantu said that student reactions to the Kirk video have not made it as far as the central office, but she suspects there have been some who have struggled with the events. <\/p>\n \u201cWe have great support systems for counseling from our traditional school counselors. We have crisis counselors that are able to help those kiddos at the campus level and get them the help that they need,\u201d Cantu said. <\/p>\n \u201cWe have district-wide crisis counselors that we can send out to that campus to help support. We also have behavior intervention teams, and we have people on those teams that can go out, and we have someone that specifically works with teachers on how to handle situations like that,\u201d she added. <\/p>\n