
The left have a serious problem with morals. Many of them need to do some soul searching.
And an unhinged leftist spouted off a truly heinous attack on this conservative leader.
In a display of breathtaking cruelty, Kathy Griffin has targeted the family of a slain conservative leader, directing her venom at Erika Kirk just months after her husband Charlie Kirk’s tragic m*rder.
This latest tirade reveals the entertainment industry’s deep-seated contempt for conservative voices and the families they leave behind.
Griffin launched her attack while speaking during her Talk Your Head Off podcast, showing no restraint in mocking Erika’s personal style and public appearances. Her words drip with the same poisonous rhetoric that has fueled real-world violence against conservatives.
“Who knows how many assassination attempts there could be, just in the next day, or how many times Erika Kirk is going to switch from her sparkle pants to that weird video that she made that’s just bizarre,” Griffin stated.
The 65-year-old comedian continued her mockery of Erika’s appearance in the video, painting it in absurd political terms:
“Wasn’t that Erika Kirk video weird? Her being not girly and looking like — I don’t even know what, like a sniper?”
“She looks like she’s going to an anti-ICE protest, which is something she would not do.”
“Look, I’m done giving her a pass, all right?”
From there, Griffin turned her fire directly on Charlie Kirk himself.
“I knew Charlie Kirk. I did a panel with him one time and his squished-in face,” she said.
“And, yeah, I said that, because that dude was a straight-up N*zi.”
“And that is my opinion,” she continued. “But, you know, the way we’ve deified him is bizarre. I’ve never seen anything like it.”
Conservatives have watched in disgust as left-wing celebrities treat the m*rder of a prominent activist as just another opportunity to score points.
Rather than showing basic human decency to a young widow, Griffin piles on with personal insults and N*zi comparisons that should shock any decent American.

















