Kirk’s letter, first published by the New York Post, did indeed start with the sentence: "One of my greatest joys as a Christian is advocating for Israel and forming alliances with Jews in the fight to protect Judeo-Christian civilization."
He went on to say: "I regret to report that anti-Israel and antisemitic trends are at record levels on social media. These negative sentiments then flow downstream into college campuses and even seep into the conservative MAGA community."
Kirk details the main questions and points he is often asked to answer during campus tours and warns that "Israel is getting CRUSHED on social media and you are losing younger generations of Americans, even among MAGA conservatives."
"I’m accused of being a paid apologist for Israel when I defend her," he wrote, "however, if I don’t defend Israel strongly enough, I’m accused of being antisemite. I know you’ve got a 7 front war and my kvetching pales in comparison."
"But I’m trying to convey to you that Israel is losing support even in conservative circles," Kirk said. "This should be a 5 alarm fire."
Now, some people are saying the full letter disproves Owens' narrative, including Pro-Israel activist Gideon Askowitz, who said in a post on X on Tuesday: "Charlie Kirk’s letter to Israel is one of the most damning indictments on Candace Owens ever. The letter is dripping with LOVE for Israel and a frustration for its failure on social media."
Similarly, Australian freelance filmmaker Nathan Livingstone, who runs MilkBarTV and is followed by prominent American conservatives such as Kelly and Ashley St. Clair, said: "Candace was COMPLETELY WRONG."
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