Berliner Boersenzeitung - After Kirk: Speech at Risk

EUR -
AED 4.178503
AFN 72.817958
ALL 94.307534
AMD 417.52196
ANG 2.037089
AOA 1043.346278
ARS 1680.769414
AUD 1.651341
AWG 2.048008
AZN 1.93225
BAM 1.956432
BBD 2.287709
BDT 139.595071
BGN 1.923854
BHD 0.428258
BIF 3384.665992
BMD 1.137782
BND 1.473596
BOB 7.842256
BRL 5.890069
BSD 1.135895
BTN 107.07969
BWP 15.499673
BYN 3.232373
BYR 22300.534107
BZD 2.284324
CAD 1.615042
CDF 2582.766022
CHF 0.920534
CLF 0.026602
CLP 1046.982471
CNY 7.7413
CNH 7.743707
COP 3922.311237
CRC 516.953106
CUC 1.137782
CUP 30.151232
CVE 110.763235
CZK 24.277888
DJF 202.270638
DKK 7.476521
DOP 67.555825
DZD 151.788141
EGP 56.327508
ERN 17.066735
ETB 179.147185
FJD 2.578327
FKP 0.86098
GBP 0.861978
GEL 3.009454
GGP 0.86098
GHS 12.800022
GIP 0.86098
GMD 83.058454
GNF 9989.728998
GTQ 8.658529
GYD 237.458319
HKD 8.921738
HNL 30.393523
HRK 7.536331
HTG 148.454055
HUF 354.703076
IDR 20406.12649
ILS 3.408797
IMP 0.86098
INR 107.733255
IQD 1487.898492
IRR 1564507.623398
ISK 144.0318
JEP 0.86098
JMD 179.011531
JOD 0.80665
JPY 183.89464
KES 147.400055
KGS 99.498748
KHR 4574.054744
KMF 493.797784
KPW 1024.004515
KRW 1757.771222
KWD 0.352325
KYD 0.946517
KZT 550.471387
LAK 25245.118479
LBP 101714.675008
LKR 382.811546
LRD 206.553058
LSL 18.809207
LTL 3.359576
LVL 0.688233
LYD 7.294317
MAD 10.712788
MDL 20.160659
MGA 4842.479059
MKD 61.64892
MMK 2388.717343
MNT 4073.536608
MOP 9.172959
MRU 45.114269
MUR 54.28369
MVR 17.578643
MWK 1969.628551
MXN 19.953521
MYR 4.665593
MZN 72.702936
NAD 18.809207
NGN 1565.725144
NIO 41.794718
NOK 11.244822
NPR 171.458449
NZD 2.016111
OMR 0.437478
PAB 1.134927
PEN 3.89355
PGK 4.984333
PHP 69.725601
PKR 316.112646
PLN 4.284775
PYG 6940.914354
QAR 4.147219
RON 5.235849
RSD 117.403259
RUB 85.734578
RWF 1669.085812
SAR 4.264425
SBD 9.16137
SCR 15.065958
SDG 682.668892
SEK 11.077933
SGD 1.474663
SHP 0.849469
SLE 28.216233
SLL 23858.731208
SOS 649.094488
SRD 42.461874
STD 23549.797521
STN 24.526241
SVC 9.938677
SYP 125.76147
SZL 18.808446
THB 38.041816
TJS 10.492303
TMT 3.982238
TND 3.342235
TOP 2.739507
TRY 53.048437
TTD 7.714288
TWD 36.245165
TZS 2989.734767
UAH 51.074789
UGX 4199.208158
USD 1.137782
UYU 45.533301
UZS 13633.162054
VES 706.281792
VND 29934.4848
VUV 136.478022
WST 3.169289
XAF 656.659583
XAG 0.020121
XAU 0.000284
XCD 3.074914
XCG 2.046999
XDR 0.816724
XOF 656.705807
XPF 119.331742
YER 271.503336
ZAR 18.796699
ZMK 10241.409173
ZMW 20.502378
ZWL 366.365453
  • CMSC

    -0.0190

    22.046

    -0.09%

  • GSK

    0.8000

    51.89

    +1.54%

  • BCC

    2.1000

    79.76

    +2.63%

  • BTI

    1.0900

    62.48

    +1.74%

  • NGG

    0.5900

    83.42

    +0.71%

  • RIO

    1.0800

    95.11

    +1.14%

  • AZN

    2.6600

    185.68

    +1.43%

  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    61.3

    0%

  • BP

    -0.1400

    37.72

    -0.37%

  • BCE

    0.0000

    23.2

    0%

  • CMSD

    -0.0900

    21.93

    -0.41%

  • RELX

    -0.2300

    30.92

    -0.74%

  • RYCEF

    0.7000

    18.7

    +3.74%

  • JRI

    0.0100

    12.58

    +0.08%

  • VOD

    0.0500

    13.86

    +0.36%


After Kirk: Speech at Risk




The killing of Charlie Kirk at a public campus event has sent shock waves through the United States and far beyond. It was not only the murder of a high‑profile activist in full view of students; it was an attack on the premise that contentious ideas can be debated in open air without fear. Authorities say a young man has been taken into custody, and investigators have not publicly established a motive. The urgency and breadth of the response—from law enforcement, universities, policymakers and tech platforms—make clear that this is a pivot point for how democracies balance security, speech and civic peace.

Campus speech under a new security regime
Kirk’s signature format—unscripted outdoor debates that drew both supporters and critics—now looks like a security planner’s worst case. In the days since the shooting, elected officials and campus leaders have begun moving events indoors, postponing rallies, and reassessing perimeter control, rooflines, and vantage points. Expect a rapid shift away from spontaneous outdoor gatherings toward credentialed, magnetometer‑protected forums with controlled ingress and overwatch. That will keep more people safe. It will also narrow the public square: fewer ad‑hoc debates, more ticketed events, more distance—literal and figurative—between speakers and the people who would challenge them.

The information war: virality, moderation and hoaxes
Footage of the shooting spread instantly across major platforms. Within hours, game platforms and social networks were forced to remove content that trivialized or re‑enacted the killing. Alongside the genuine evidence came a familiar wave of misinformation: recycled images falsely identifying the shooter; out‑of‑context videos; and speculative narratives that hardened into tribal “truths” before investigators could brief the public. This cycle—violence, virality, platform triage, and rumor—now shapes public understanding of political crime. The likely consequence is more aggressive emergency moderation rules for graphic content and for posts that glorify or game‑ify real‑world attacks. That, in turn, will revive older debates about who decides what counts as “glorification,” and whether private enforcement against certain kinds of speech chills legitimate reporting or commentary.

Condemnation is broad; polarization remains
The killing drew rapid denunciations from across the political spectrum and from leaders overseas. Yet the same feeds that carried condolences also carried celebrations and taunts from a small but visible fringe. University communities abroad were forced to distance themselves from individuals who appeared to cheer the violence. This is the paradox of the moment: mainstream figures on the left and right condemned the assassination, but the incentives of online life still reward performative cruelty. For conservatives, the episode reinforces what many already believe—that tolerance on the contemporary left often ends where non‑left ideas begin. For many progressives, the fear is that any backlash will be used to muzzle dissent, not to protect dialogue. Both narratives will harden; neither will reduce risk on their own.

Policy whiplash: security first, speech later
In Washington and in state capitals, the immediate response is security‑first: improving event protection, tightening coordination between campus police and federal agencies, and closing obvious gaps in venue hardening. Expect committees to examine rooftop access, “line‑of‑sight” risks, and crowd screening standards for non‑government speakers whose events attract opposition. There are early signals, too, of measures aimed at those who praise or trivialize political violence—especially from outside the country—through visa scrutiny and other tools. While such steps may be lawful and defensible, they raise enduring questions: Where does punishing incitement end and punishing opinion begin? And who gets to draw that line at Internet speed?

Universities at the fault line
American campuses will bear the brunt of the near‑term change. Student groups will be asked to accept more intrusive security rules. Open‑air forums may be curtailed. Insurance and legal counsel will push institutions toward lower‑risk formats. Ironically, some of these moves will reduce the very exposure that made Kirk’s events attractive to his supporters: the willingness to be confronted, in public, by critics. Whether universities can design spaces that are both truly open and genuinely safe will be a defining governance challenge of the academic year.

Global ripples
Abroad, leaders framed the killing as an assault on democratic norms and free inquiry. In Europe, it has already fed arguments about whether the rhetoric of American culture‑war politics is compatible with campus safety and pluralism. Expect more speech‑restrictive proposals in some jurisdictions, sharper scrutiny of U.S. speakers invited to foreign universities, and tighter platform enforcement against posts that celebrate political violence. At the same time, expect right‑of‑center parties to argue that tolerant societies must be intolerant of those who try to silence opponents by force.

What changes next - Three shifts now look likely:
1) Hardened venues, fewer spontaneous debates. Event organizers will accept higher costs and less spontaneity to reduce risk.

2) Stricter emergency moderation. Platforms will move faster to throttle “glorification” content, with new escalation paths for law enforcement and public officials.

3) A sharper line between words and violence. Political leaders are already insisting that speech—even harsh speech—must remain legal, while violence must be punished swiftly and severely. Whether that principle is applied evenly will determine whether this moment de‑escalates or further radicalizes the culture.

Kirk’s killing will not end the argument over speech; it will intensify it. If institutions respond by protecting debate while resisting the impulse to criminalize mere offense, the public square may emerge narrower but sturdier. If, instead, security becomes a pretext to police ideology, the assassination will have succeeded in shrinking the space where disagreeable ideas can be aired without fear.

The extreme left-wing scene in particular, as it exists in the Federal Republic of Germany, fuelled by a completely mindless gender craze coupled with ideological green agitation, leaves one speechless and demonstrates the downright anti-social brutalisation in Europe. Anything that does not share the same opinion must be met with decisive harshness, because democracy, no matter where on our planet, must not be intimidated by such undemocratic behaviour!