Charlie Kirk’s haunting words have come back to shock the nation. Just weeks before the conservative firebrand was assassinated in public, he allegedly told his close friend and fellow commentator Candace Owens that he didn’t believe he’d live long enough to “see the end of this revolution.”
Now, RadarOnline.com can report that Owens has ignited fresh controversy by posting what she claims are Kirk’s final private text messages — revealing a chilling premonition about his own death and sparking a storm of backlash from fans, critics, and even fellow conservatives.
According to screenshots shared by Owens, Kirk began the exchange on a friendly note, calling her “the Iron Lady of America.” But his tone shifted quickly.
“I am not sure I will live to see the end of this revolution,” he allegedly wrote. “Since the beginning of TPUSA, I knew in my gut I might get wiped out at any time. I cannot explain it. But I dream about it all the time.”
Owens replied that his fears sounded more like “a fear manifestation than an actualization.” Kirk, however, stood firm. “I’m not afraid of it,” he allegedly said. “I’m just telling you what I know to be true.”
While Owens insists the texts are authentic, skeptics have swarmed social media with doubts. “There’s no timestamp. No capitalization for ‘God.’ This looks fake,” one user wrote. Another accused Owens of “photoshopping for attention,” saying, “It’s diabolical to exploit the memory of a fallen hero.”
The backlash was immediate. Many called the release of private texts “disrespectful” and “exploitative.”
“I lost my best friend too,” one X user posted. “You don’t share personal messages like that — not for clicks, not for anything.”
Owens, however, doubled down. “Charlie’s message deserves to be heard,” she said on her show The Candace Owens Podcast. “He knew what was coming. He warned us.”
Since Kirk’s death, Owens has continued to promote conspiracy theories about his murder — and her motives are being questioned.
Critics online accuse her of using his death to generate revenue and attention as she faces a costly defamation lawsuit from French President Emmanuel Macron and his wife, Brigitte. Owens previously claimed Brigitte Macron was “born a man,” prompting a major international legal battle.
“She’s grifting hard to pay for her legal defense,” one user wrote. “Expect more merch, more wild theories, more exploitation. She’s desperate.”
In a recent broadcast, Owens claimed that on the same day Kirk was killed, she and Tucker Carlson were warned to “lay low.”
“I got multiple phone calls saying me and Tucker were on a list,” Owens said. “To have someone tell me that after watching a friend executed — that’s terrifying.”
When pressed for details, she admitted she was “never told exactly who made the threat.”
Later in the same episode, Owens turned emotional. “I don’t know what’s going to happen. I don’t know how many days I have left on this planet. But I know what I’m fighting for — and this life is not it.”
Kirk’s death has shaken America’s conservative movement to its core. Turning Point USA — the youth organization he founded at just 18 — once drew thousands of college students to rallies across the nation. His assassination has become a lightning rod for conspiracy, grief, and political chaos.
“Charlie was a visionary,” one former TPUSA staffer told The Daily Ledger. “He believed he was fighting for something bigger than himself — but none of us thought he meant it literally.”
As questions continue swirling about who killed Kirk and why, Owens’ decision to publicize his alleged final texts has added another layer of controversy to an already explosive story — one that’s dividing even his most loyal followers.
“Maybe he really did see it coming,” another former ally said. “But even if he did, he didn’t deserve to go out this way — or to have his private words turned into a spectacle.”
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