The Ungodly Campaign to Destroy Erika Kirkhttps://pjmedia.com/scott-pinsker/2026/03/21/the-ungodly-campaign-to-destroy-erika-kirk-n4950911 The jackals, monsters, and vultures waited until Charlie Kirk was dead. None of them raised their daggers when her husband could still defend his wife. None of them dared challenge Charlie when he walked the earth — because they’re conmen, creeps, criminals, and cowards.
...
She’s a woman of sorrows and acquainted with grief. She’s despised by the left — and influencers on the right — and it’s triggered a feeding frenzy of conspiracies so utterly dehumanizing, if you’re not morally outraged, you have no soul.
I honestly don’t know which conspiracy theory is the worst:
Erika Kirk murdered her husband.
She’s grieving “wrong” and therefore never loved Charlie.
She’s a liar.
She’s a child-grooming pedo.
She recruited little girls for Jeffrey Epstein.
She traffics children.
She’s having an affair with JD Vance.
She’s a phony and a fraud.
She’s faking all her emotions.
The only thing she cares about is money.
The latest violation of her privacy and humanity came from the clothing brand Alo, which, it seems, just leaked her personal data to TikTok influencers.
An employee at All hated Erika Kirk that (s)he
looked up her account and leaked information from it. All has some 'splainin' to do, that employee should be canned for cause, and the
former[p/I] employee having trouble finding a place willing to give her fryolator trying. The latter because of the gross misuse of company assets and violation of a(ny) customer's privacy, not specifically because of Erika Kirk (= Jane Schmoe from Kokomo should not have her privacy violated that way). BTW:
Only it wasn’t Erika who made those purchases — it was a Turning Point USA staffer named Elizabeth McCoy:
On Thursday, TPUSA staffer Elizabeth McCoy took to social media to explain that she purchased the clothes because Kirk was forced to quickly board a plane after learning her husband had been assassinated at Utah Valley University.
"I was the one who made the Alo purchase, in person, in Utah. When we got the call that Charlie had been shot, we rushed from the office and into the airplane. We arrived in Utah with nothing but the clothes we were wearing. We were in those clothes all day at the hospital and slept in them that night," McCoy wrote.
"The next morning, our friend Stacy handed me her card, and I went out and picked up some items and toiletries for various team members and Erika. Alo was down the street," McCoy continued. "To accuse Erika or anyone else of entertaining a ‘shopping spree’ hours after her husband was brutally murdered is cruel and vicious."
My emphasis.