Listen to the People: Ben Bergquam Honors Charlie Kirk While Tributes Defy Media Narratives

When Ben Bergquam opened his phone on September 10th, he wasn’t just uploading another update to his Real America’s Voice audience. He was watching something that pierced through politics: a quiet group of Americans planting flags in remembrance of the nearly 3,000 lives lost on 9/11. Side by side with that solemn act, Bergquam recorded his own tribute to Charlie Kirk, assassinated just hours earlier, tying together national grief, personal loss, and the call to honor those who dedicate themselves to America’s future.

“Charlie was called by God for such a time as this,” Bergquam said in his first reaction video. “As a dad, as a husband, as a leader—he was a light in dark times. Evil doesn’t go after the ineffective. It goes after the strong.” His voice cracked with emotion, but what followed was not despair—it was determination.

What has surprised many since Kirk’s death isn’t just the outpouring from the conservative movement. It’s the tributes from groups the media insisted despised him: Black Americans, gay Americans, trans Americans. In video after video, people who mainstream outlets framed as Kirk’s “enemies” have spoken candidly of respect, debate, even admiration. Some language is raw, some graphic, but it’s real—and it tells a story the press rarely acknowledges.

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Listen to the people. That’s the refrain emerging from these clips. They’re not polished press statements; they’re unfiltered voices insisting Kirk’s legacy isn’t about division but dialogue. One young man admitted he used to think Kirk “hated people like me,” until meeting him face to face. “He listened. We didn’t agree on everything, but he didn’t treat me like garbage. That matters.” Another, visibly shaken, said: “I thought he was against us. Turns out the media lied. And now he’s gone.”

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Thousands of similar tributes have surfaced online, a grassroots counter-narrative to years of headlines branding Kirk as a symbol of hostility. What emerges is not uniform agreement on policy, but something deeper: a shared American value of debate, respect, and compromise.

Bergquam has leaned into this unexpected groundswell. “If the media won’t tell the truth, then we will,” he posted, walking through Chicago’s streets days after Kirk’s assassination. His video, framed against luxury homes and boarded-up storefronts, called out political elites for ignoring everyday pain while amplifying false narratives. “Charlie’s death should wake people up,” Bergquam said. “If you keep believing the lies they sell, you’ll never hear what the people themselves are saying.”

That “people” includes voices the political class loves to pit against one another. In the raw reaction videos now circulating, the message isn’t about erasing differences—it’s about refusing to let differences be weaponized into hatred. One trans woman who spoke through tears put it plainly: “He was supposed to be the enemy. But he treated me with respect. We argued, but we laughed too. That’s America. That’s what’s supposed to matter.”

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For years, mainstream commentators insisted that Kirk’s brand of conservatism was inherently exclusionary, that the MAGA movement could never connect with communities outside its base. But these tributes, recorded in kitchens, dorm rooms, and city streets, tell another story. They are messy, unscripted, and sincere. They stand as living proof that misinformation has consequences—not just for reputations, but for the unity of the country.

As Bergquam continues to film, post, and speak, his message has crystallized into something larger than a personal loss. “This isn’t just about Charlie,” one commentator said in one clip. “It’s about the fight for truth. It’s about building a safer and more prosperous America together. If you’re not listening now, when will you?”

The injustice of false narratives, amplified for years, can’t be undone overnight. But in the flood of tribute videos—thousands of them—the picture is clear: Charlie Kirk built bridges with people the media swore he hated. In death, those bridges may prove to be his greatest legacy.

Listen to the people. That’s what the spirit of Charlie Kirk is urging America to do. And that’s the message ringing out from the voices the media tried to silence.

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