Charlie Kirk has directed most of his rhetoric to the US political scene, but he also ventured into foreign issues, occasionally participating in conference tour.
In May he had been visited in the United Kingdom, debating with the students of the universities of Oxford and Cambridge and appearing on the conservative GB News channel. A few days before being killed with a firearm in the Utah, he brought his message to the public of the Far East during a tour in South Korea and Japan. Last weekend he turned to conservative politicians and activists on the occasion of a symposium in Tokyo organized by Sanseito, a right -wing populist party that shook the political establishment in the recent elections of the High Chamber.
In Tokyo, Kirk had said that foreigners and supporters of mass immigration “are infiltrating very silently and secretly in Japanese life. They want to cancel, replace and eradicate Japan by importing Indonesians, Arabs and Muslims ».
He had spoken for a long time of his trip to a podcast published the day before his death, returning to a family theme – criticizing the women who choose not to have children – who echoed the opinions of his guest in Japan, the leader of Sanseito, Sohei Kamiya.
In Seoul, he had turned to more than 2,000 supporters at the Build Up Korea 2025 event, who mainly attracted young Christians and students of Evangelical schools, representing a Korean Movement Self -Cup Maga, who supports the former president under EMPHOCHMENT YOON SUK YEOL and who theorizes a Chinese conspiracy to distort the lessons both in America and in South Korea.
Kirk said he “learned a lot” from his tour in South Korea and Japan, remembering how much he felt safe in the clean and ordered roads of Seoul, where “there were no bums and nobody asked you for money”.
During his three -day visit to the United Kingdom in May, he ran collided with the students of the Cambridge Union Debate Society, claiming that “Lockdown were useless”, “life begins to conception” and that the US civil rights act was a “error”.
Kirk had reiterated the same considerations in Oxford, also claiming that immigrants were “importing insidious values in the West” and that police violence against blacks was the result of a “disproportionate crime problem” in the color community.
He had told the right newspaper GB News that the United Kingdom was a “envelope” of himself and needed to “find his charm”. “We Americans love this country and we are really sorry for what is happening to him,” he said, and then described the United Kingdom on his return as a “totalitarian hell of the third world, sad, chilling and depressing”.
Although he loved to refer to Europe in his programs, the only other recent public visit of Kirk was a journey to Greenland in January in the company of Donald Trump Jr. It was an opportunity to argue that the Greenlanders should be allowed to “detach themselves from their Danish masters”, and then to have “the opportunity to be part of the United States, not unlike Puerto Rico or Guam” to be “more rich, more rich”.
Kirk has been strongly critical of many countries: he defined France as “a joke”, the Germans “a pack of plants” that do not recognize freedom of speech, but only totalitarianism as a value. He was a convinced supporter of Trump’s policies focused on China, supporting the attacks of the president at the University of Harvard in April and the bloody commercial war with Beijing defining the United States “a Vassallo state” submissive to the Chinese Communist Party. Belt and Road Initiative, he said, was not anything but a Chinese attempt to create “many small colonies all over the world” and the Americans should have appropriates Taiwan already after the Second World War. In a video in May, Kirk took the opportunity for the escalation of hostilities between India and Pakistan to support his thesis against the US military intervention abroad. Describing Pakistan as a “very, very subtle actor”, emphasized the question of the issue of the most viewed to the Indians in the context of a commercial agreement between the United States and India, accusing the Indians of stealing jobs from the Americans.