“Charlie Kirk is irreplaceable. You do what you do. I do what I do. We reach the people we reach," Cain said. Cain talked about spending time at a Texas Longhorns game and even visiting a frat house where his son was. “And you just kind of look across it, you know, and you’re like, man, these are the ones that Charlie reached,” he said.
“It’s incredible, right?” Posobiec responded. Cain agreed, saying, “Like it’s truly incredible, and I don’t know how, oh, it’s so generational, man, and I don’t know, I don’t know how that continues. How do you continue reaching that generation which, if anything right now, not just wants but needs more of that message?”
Posobiec pointed to comments made by Erika Kirk, Charlie’s widow. “She said the best way to honor Charlie is to continue his mission,” he said, "the best way to do that is just do what he always said. Turning Point was always meant to be an institution that survived and lived sort of beyond Charlie … well, now he’s on God’s mission now, I guess, God’s assignment, God’s task.”
Posobiec said, “Well, who’s the next Charlie Kirk?” Posobiec said, “and I think, I think if somebody asked Charlie that, he would say, you are, right? You, anyone can be.”
“You don’t, don’t be the next Charlie Kirk, just be the next you,” Posobiec continued. “Find a table and set it up in your park or on your campus or find a chair and a megaphone, whatever it is, and just go and do this and. Get active and be that light against this sea of darkness that we’re currently seeing. And you can do it too. And oh, by the way, if you want some, if you want to join with others, then, then Turning Point’s going to be there.”




