Witchcraft and a Deadly Hex: Jezebel’s Curse on Charlie Kirk Raises Alarms. Erika Kirk ‘genuinely rattled’ after witches curse husband Charlie

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Witchcraft and a Deadly Hex: Jezebel’s Curse on Charlie Kirk Raises Alarms. Erika Kirk ‘genuinely rattled’ after witches curse husband Charlie

Conservative commentator Megyn Kelly strongly criticized feminist website Jezebel on Tuesday for publishing an article in which the author admitted to paying witches on Etsy to curse Charlie Kirk—just two days before he was fatally shot.

According to Kelly, the piece deeply unsettled Kirk and his wife Erika, leaving them shaken and seeking prayer from a Catholic priest the night before the Turning Point USA founder was assassinated during a speaking event in Utah on September 10.

“This is what I want everyone, including Jezebel and Etsy, to understand,” Kelly said on her SiriusXM show. “Erika and Charlie Kirk heard about these curses, and it genuinely rattled Erika. She knew Christian teachings on spiritual warfare. She loved her husband deeply, and she was afraid when she found out what had been done.”

Photo of Charlie Kirk with a glitch effect, featured in a Jezebel article titled "We Paid Some Etsy Witches to Curse Charlie Kirk."
Photo of Charlie Kirk with a glitch effect, featured in a Jezebel article titled “We Paid Some Etsy Witches to Curse Charlie Kirk.” Jezebel

The controversial article, published by Jezebel on September 8, referred to Kirk as a “far-right misogynist.” The unnamed writer detailed how they hired witches on Etsy to perform “multiple curses” against the 31-year-old conservative figure, claiming it was retribution for his “years of regressive rhetoric.”

Two days later, 22-year-old Tyler Robinson allegedly shot Kirk in the neck during the first stop of his “American Comeback Tour” at Utah Valley University in Orem. The single gunshot proved fatal. Kirk, a father of two, died shortly afterward.

“Why would anyone inflict this kind of emotional torture on a family—especially a Christian, God-fearing family?” Kelly asked during the broadcast. “Why target a young couple, the loving parents of two babies, whose only ‘crime’ was speaking publicly about their values and trying to make a difference?”

Violence, Há Tristeza nalgum?

Following news of Kirk’s death, Jezebel quickly added an editor’s note condemning the violence, and later removed the article entirely. However, Kelly said that wasn’t enough. She called for the publication to be shut down, demanded the identity of the article’s author be revealed, and urged Etsy to stop allowing the sale of occult services such as curses.

“Both Jezebel and Etsy owe Erika Kirk a full-throated, unequivocal apology,” Kelly said. “They introduced something vile and unnecessary into her family’s final hours together. It’s despicable.”

She concluded by urging Etsy to return to its original purpose—“arts and crafts and jewelry”—instead of hosting what she described as harmful spiritual practices.

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