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Two Israel Defense Forces (IDF) soldiers were killed by terror operatives in Rafah, southern Gaza, threatening the ceasefire with Hamas, Israeli military sources confirmed to Fox News Digital on Sunday.
The soldiers, Major Yaniv Kula, 26, a company commander in the 932nd Battalion of the Nahal Brigade, and Staff Sergeant Itay Yavetz, 21, a combat soldier in the same battalion, were both based in Modi’in-Maccabim-Reut.
According to the initial IDF investigation, a militant cell had emerged from a tunnel and fired at an excavation vehicle, killing the two soldiers. A reserve soldier was also severely wounded and evacuated to a hospital, per The Times of Israel.
According to Professor Kobi Michael, senior researcher at the Institute for National Security Studies (INSS) and the Misgav Institute, the attack showed the fragility of the ceasefire deal.
‘Today’s violation of the agreement was severe,’ Michael said. ‘I assume that this is not going to be the last one,’ he told Fox News Digital.
‘Israel complies [with President Trump’s] plan and wants to continue with the realization of the plan,’ he said.
‘This agreement was violated since the first day by Hamas,’ Michael added. ‘And it continued with their behavior with regard to the hostages, the dead hostages.’
‘All the manipulation that they are doing plays on the nerves of Israeli society,’ he continued, saying the terror group is ‘making themselves as if they are not able… to find the bodies where everybody knows that they can.’
Michael detailed how the first violation came immediately after the redeployment of the IDF along the so-called Yellow Line, ‘when Hamas first sent [civilian] children in order to provoke the IDF, in order to check if the IDF is aware enough and ready enough.’
‘And then they sent militants of Hamas, and some of them were even killed along the yellow line,’ he said.
‘They continue reconstituting themselves and attacking the IDF by using the tunnels, using the shafts going out, because they now feel much freer, because the IDF left the populated area,’ he explained.
Michael also cited Hamas’ ‘butchering’ of civilians ‘because they suspect that they collaborated with Israel, or because they are afraid that these hamulas or clans might oppose them in the future… and weaken them.’
In response to Sunday’s attack, the IDF launched air and ground strikes across southern Gaza.
‘The IDF also struck and dismantled six kilometers of underground terrorist infrastructure, using over 120 munitions. The underground site was used by the terrorist organization to advance attacks against the State of Israel,’ it said in a statement.
‘The IDF will continue to respond firmly and will operate to eliminate any threat to the State of Israel,’ it said.
Israel simultaneously announced a suspension of all humanitarian aid to the Gaza Strip.
Michael warned that Hamas has no intention of dismantling itself and cooperating with the plan when it comes to demilitarizing the Gaza Strip and establishing a mechanism of alternative governance.
‘Hamas is still using the tunnels, and intends to reconstruct the tunnels that were destroyed by Israel, because they intend to continue the war against Israel,’ he said.
He said that the militant organization has been rebuilding its ranks and reasserting control in the Strip.
‘They immediately recruited [thousands] of people and deployed them and are butchering their own people,’ Michael said.
‘They do not intend to give up on their position and influence in the Gaza Strip. They do not accept the idea of dismantling themselves. And they do not accept the idea that a foreign force or board will govern the Gaza Strip,’ he concluded.
The incident comes just days after a U.S.-brokered ceasefire, which took effect Oct. 10, temporarily halted the two-year war between Israel and Hamas.
Under the deal, hostages were released in exchange for Palestinian prisoners, and a ceasefire was declared.
Later on Sunday, the IDF announced the resumption of the ceasefire, following retaliatory strikes.
‘In accordance with the directive of the political echelon and following a series of significant strikes in response to Hamas’ violations, the IDF has begun the renewed enforcement of the ceasefire,’ a statement read.
‘The IDF will continue to uphold the ceasefire agreement and will respond firmly to any violation of it,’ the military added.
In a statement, Israeli UN Ambassador Danny Danon said: ‘Earlier today, two IDF soldiers, Maj. Yaniv Kula and Staff Sgt. Itay Yavetz, were killed by Hamas terrorists in Rafah in what was a flagrant violation of the ceasefire agreement.’
‘We mourn their loss and send our condolences to their families. Israel has abided by the terms of the ceasefire agreement, but we will make it clear to Hamas terrorists that the IDF will do whatever it takes to protect Israel’s security,’ Danon added.
Michael, meanwhile, predicted delays in reopening the Rafah Crossing, a critical entry point for aid and movement.
‘I don’t think Rafah Crossing will open tomorrow,’ he said. ‘It will take several days until it is opened,’ he said.
In the spring of 2022, Canadian teenager Markus Schouten’s dying wish was that no child should be forced to choose between life and death.
Markus had just learned he was about to die. His oncologist broke the news to him and his family on the eighth floor cancer ward at British Columbia Children’s Hospital in Vancouver, Canada. They held each other, weeping.
Weeks later, lying on his family’s living room sofa, Markus dictated a letter to the Canadian Parliament’s Special Joint Committee on Medical Assistance in Dying, established to set guidelines on a federal law that allowed ‘assisted suicide’ in Canada in 2016.
Markus opposed lobbying efforts to expand the law to children under the age of 18.
‘That’s because life is worth living and we should always work to alleviate suffering without eliminating the sufferer,’ read the final letter, which was signed by his parents.
The letter closed, ‘Life is worth living, even when we are dying.’
A month later, Markus died, surrounded by his family and friends, telling them, ‘See you in paradise.’
Three years later, his parents, Mike and Jennifer Schouten, are carrying the torch for Markus in a mission to block efforts to allow ‘mature minors’ the right to choose to die through assisted suicide. They now work alongside a global network of like-minded advocates, including disability rights groups, who argue the assisted-suicide industry targets vulnerable people who would benefit from assisted living services. Already, in Canada, the law is expected to expand to patients with severe psychiatric disorders, as early as 2027.
But they are up against a powerful, well-funded machine. A Fox Digital investigation reveals the Schoutens and other opponents of euthanasia face a multimillion-dollar global lobby that could be called Assisted Suicide Inc., a sprawling network changing laws worldwide, developing euthanasia services for funeral parlors, selling ‘suicide pods,’ promoting ‘suicide tourism’ and even training ‘doulas for death.’
‘As we continue to expand the euthanasia regime, all the safeguards and windows have gone out the window,’ said Mike Schouten. ‘And it becomes open season for anyone to choose death, including children.’
What began as a limited effort to provide adults with terminal illnesses the ability to end pain and suffering has now grown into an international industry. According to a database compiled by the Pearl Project, a nonprofit journalism initiative, at least 96 organizations worldwide are now part of this movement.
The global lobby cloaks assisted suicide in the language of civil rights and human rights, using euphemisms in their names, such as ‘assisted dying,’ ‘medical assistance in dying,’ ‘dying with dignity,’ ‘choice,’ ‘end of life,’ ‘completed life,’ ‘final exit,’ ‘free exit’ and the ‘right to die.’
These groups have a presence on every continent, but are predominately found in the West, which also faces alarmingly low birth rates. There are 41 groups in Europe; 31 groups in North America, with 25 of them in the United States, four in Canada and two in Mexico; 13 in Oceania, with most in Australia and one in New Zealand; and only five in Asia, two in Africa, and three in South America.
While most of their work has focused on adults, with Robert Munsch, the Canadian author of the best-selling children’s book, ‘Love You Forever,’ the latest high-profile person to recently announce he was approved for assisted suicide after being diagnosed with dementia. ‘Hello, Doc — come kill me!’ he joked, sharing the news.
The boundaries are shifting. Behind the push to extend these laws to children lies a legal Trojan horse: the ‘mature minor doctrine.’
This concept, first established in a 1967 Washington Supreme Court case, Smith v. Seibly, once allowed limited medical discretion for minors. But over decades, it has metastasized into a sweeping jurisdiction for granting children autonomy – and secrecy – over their medical decisions. Today, it lets minors make choices without parental involvement on gender pronouns, gender transitions, contraception and abortion. In 13 U.S. states and the District of Columbia, minors can even obtain abortions without parental knowledge.
Now, advocates are leveraging that same doctrine to argue that children should have the ‘medical autonomy’ to choose death. The ‘National Youth Rights Association,’ a 501(c)(3) nonprofit based in Hyattsville, Md., uses the ‘mature minors’ to die by physician-assisted suicide.
Euthanasia is already legal for adults in Australia, Belgium, Colombia, the Netherlands, New Zealand, Spain and 11 U.S. states. But three countries – the Netherlands, Belgium and Colombia – have gone further, allowing ‘mature minors’ to die by physician-assisted suicide.
In February 2023, despite the pleas of Marcus and his parents, Canada’s Special Joint Committee on Medical Assistance in Dying recommended extending the right to some youth, declaring that parents should be ‘consulted’ but that the ‘will of a minor’ with decision-making capacity ‘ultimately takes priority.’
The same debate has now reached the United Kingdom, where a bill to allow adult euthanasia is moving through the British Parliament. Earlier this year, the British House of Commons narrowly voted 259 to 216 to bar physicians from discussing assisted suicide with youth, meaning nearly half of lawmakers supported discussing assisted suicide for youth.
Katharine Birbalsingh, a British educator known as ‘Britain’s Strictest Headmistress,’ believes it’s only a matter of time before youth are included.
‘Assisted suicide will spread, full stop,’ she told Fox Digital. ‘And the people allowed to do assisted suicide will grow, making it younger and younger.’
Birbalsingh argues that Western societies have fallen for the dangerous illusion that ‘the child must lead,’ leading to thinking such as ‘Oh, he wants to change his gender, or he wants to commit suicide.’
‘Once upon a time,’ she said, ‘adults used to say, ‘No, the child is not capable of leading, because he is a child.‘ In the West, we have forgotten that we’re meant to be in charge as adults.’
‘There ‘s just a million reasons why young people would want to choose death,’ said Birbalsingh, the founder of the Michaela Community School in London. ‘You know, young people are compulsive, they make whimsical decisions. They make irresponsible decisions. They’re young. That’s sort of the definition of a child.’
‘That’s why they need looking after,’ Birbalsingh added. ‘That’s why we need to look after them as adults. That’s our job. It’s our role in life, to keep and protect them, sometimes from themselves. The people making these decisions just don’t understand young people.’ Lawmakers there was a ‘very real risk’ that proposed assisted suicide legislation, called the ‘Terminally Ill Adults (End of Life) Bill,’ would be expanded to include children if they didn’t vote for her amendment.
British Labour Party MP Meg Hillier voiced similar concerns during parliamentary debate, warning that teen brains make them particularly ‘susceptible to being influenced, including into dangerous and risky behavior.’
She said, ‘In a number of countries, assisted dying laws have been expanded to allow children and young people to end their lives. We need to be alert to that very real risk.’
Another MP, Sorcha Eastwood, cited social media’s toll on youth brain health, saying, ‘If we throw this into the mix, it has the potential to do untold damage.’
So far, pro-euthanasia groups in the U.S. have remained quiet about extending assisted suicide to minors, but critics fear it’s only a matter of time.
The British Children’s Commissioner, Dame Rachel de Souza, warned that the proposed changes would allow doctors to discuss assisted dying with 17-year-olds ‘deemed competent,’ preparing them for the choice upon turning 18. In a May report, she said that she had convened a panel of youth to discuss the issue.
In Canada, the euphemism ‘MAID,’ or ‘Medical Assistance In Dying,’ has softened the conversation. But the statistics are stark. In 2023, about 15,000 Canadians died through ‘MAID,’ about one in every 20 deaths nationwide, a 16% increase from 2022, making assisted suicide the fifth leading cause of death.
The movement is also big business. Dying with Dignity Canada, based in Toronto, reported $3 billion in expenses in 2024, including $803,555 for advertising and promotions. It publicly argues that ‘mature minors should be allowed the right to choose MAID,’ calling it ‘unfair’ to deny a 17-year-old what a 70-year-old is granted.
The British Columbia Humanist Association, the Canada chapter of Humanists International Inc., a 501(c)(3) nonprofit based in New York City, likewise demands MAID access for ‘mature minors’ and ‘those whose sole underlying condition is a mental illness,’ It insisting there is ‘no moral or ethical distinction between a mature minor and a young adult.’ It argues: ‘Ensure Dignity in Death.’ The ‘high priestess’ of euthanisia, Dr. Ellen Wiebe, also supports extending assisted suicide to children.
The Netherlands offers a preview of what comes next. Legal since 2002, Dutch euthanasia laws permit doctors to end lives of children as young as one, including newborns ‘suffering unbearably with no prospects of improvement.’
By 2024, euthanasia accounted for 9,958 deaths in 2024, or 5.8% of the country’s deaths.
A recent study published in the International Journal of Psychiatry found that among Dutch euthanasia applicants, 73% were young women with psychiatric diagnoses including major depression, autism, eating disorder, trauma-related disorders and a ‘history of suicidality.’ The researchers acknowledged there is an ‘urgent need’ to study ‘persistent death wishes’ in this ‘high-risk group.’
In one chilling case, a boy with autism, aged 16 to 18, ended his life after describing it as ‘joyless’ and ‘lonely,’ according to the 2024 annual report of the Regional Euthanasia Review Committees, which approves medical-assisted suicides. His doctor ‘had no doubt about his decisional competence.’
Last year, 14 Dutch psychiatrists urged prosecutors to investigate a case involving a 17-year-old girl, Milou, who died by euthanasia after years of depression, anxiety and suicidal ideation, following childhood sexual abuse. They warned against the ‘widespread promotion of euthanasia’ leading to ‘unnecessary deaths.’ The Royal Dutch Medical Association scolded the psychiatrists, and prosecutors declined to act.
In 2014, Belgium became the second country in the world to allow child euthanasia, requiring parental consent.The Belgian Federal Euthanasia Review and Evaluation Committee says that six youth have requested euthanasia between 2014 and 2024. Last year, one young person made the request.
The industry has faced allegedly criminal revelations. In Australia, one alleged ‘euthanasia ring kingpin,’ Brett Daniel Taylor, faces prison for selling vulnerable people lethal veterinary drugs nicknamed ‘the Green Dream.’
Back in Canada, Mike and Jennifer Schouten remain committed to fulfilling their son’s wish.
Michael remembers Markus lying on the sofa, dictating the words that became his son’s final message to lawmakers.
One day, in his final days, Markus said to his parents, ‘I can see what you are doing with your work is connected to what we’re going through. If we can share our story, we should.’
Now, Michael says, ‘I feel he is blessing our work.’
This story discusses suicide. If you or someone you know is having thoughts of suicide, please contact the Suicide & Crisis Lifeline at 988 or 1-800-273-TALK (8255).
The guns have gone quiet over Gaza — for now. After years of darkness, the region has entered a new phase shaped by President Donald Trump’s decisive leadership and the landmark 20‑point Gaza peace deal. Hostages have come home, Hamas has been driven underground, and an American‑backed peace architecture has emerged where fire once raged.
For the first time in decades, Israelis and Arabs alike can glimpse something extraordinary: a path forward. Yet history reminds us that in the Middle East, every dawn carries both promise and peril. Which road will this new dawn take?
In the most hopeful scenario, Trump’s peace‑through‑strength doctrine takes root across the region. Arab nations once divided by ideology are now united by opportunity. Saudi Arabia and the Emirates invest in Gaza’s reconstruction. Egypt and Jordan join a multinational stabilization force. Israeli innovation fuses with Gulf capital to create a ‘New Abraham Corridor’ stretching from Haifa to Mumbai — a network of trade, fiber and trust.
If momentum continues, the Middle East could experience its most dynamic decade of growth in modern history, a true dividend of deterrence where strength sustains peace. This is the world imagined in Trump’s vision: when America leads with conviction, peace and prosperity follow.
Iran today lies bruised after its 12‑day war with Israel — its nuclear facilities shattered and its clerical regime faltering under global sanctions and internal dissent. But as history proves, Tehran’s rulers are nothing if not resilient. Should the Revolutionary Guard tighten its grip after Ayatollah Khamenei’s death (He’s 86 now and in fragile health.), the Islamic Republic could re‑ignite its ‘Axis of Resistance,’ funneling arms to Gaza, Lebanon and Yemen.
A revived Iran — driven less by theology than by vengeance — could again bankroll Hamas, Hezbollah and the Houthis, destabilizing every border from the Golan to the Gulf. That path leads not to peace but to another round of rockets.
Even as the ink dries on the ceasefire, Hamas cadres are reportedly resurfacing under new guises — embedding themselves in Gaza’s police, charities and reconstruction committees. As analyst Matthew Levitt warned in Foreign Affairs, Hamas is ‘not done fighting.’ It has survived isolation before — after Oslo, after 2014, after the October 2023 massacre. If it is allowed to mutate rather than disarm, today’s peace will become tomorrow’s deception.
A more modest outcome is a Middle East trapped in uneasy calm. Israel remains wary, Arab states distracted and Gaza suspended between aid and anarchy. The Palestinian Authority governs half‑heartedly — half technocrats, half radicals. Donors rebuild while militants lurk in the shadows. This scenario mirrors Lebanon’s long stagnation: peace without progress, stability without spirit. Better than war — but a waste of the rarest currency in the Middle East: hope.
History proves that courage can rewrite destiny. When Egyptian President Anwar Sadat made peace with Israel in 1979, he was condemned across the Arab world — yet his boldness built the foundation of modern regional stability.
Today’s leaders face a similar choice. If Arab reformers and Israeli visionaries link economic corridors, energy grids and AI‑driven infrastructure, they could transform the ‘war economy’ into a peace economy — creating jobs, dignity and shared destiny for millions of young Arabs.
Peace must be protected with the same vigilance once used for war. To preserve this dawn:
Enforce the disarmament clauses of the Gaza accord through a multinational stabilization mission with real teeth, funded by the U.S., Gulf states and the EU.
Starve Iran’s proxies of cash and narrative — every diverted aid dollar or false grievance must meet swift exposure and penalty.
Reward reformers, isolate spoilers. States that promote coexistence should earn trade incentives and security partnerships; those that relapse into terror should face diplomatic quarantine.
This is not nation‑building — it is peace‑proofing: the disciplined engineering of stability.
The Middle East now stands at a crossroads of consequence. Down one path lies renewal — an alliance of nations liberated from fear. Down another lies relapse into the inferno that has burned for generations. The difference will be leadership.
If Arab reformers and Israeli visionaries link economic corridors, energy grids and AI‑driven infrastructure, they could transform the ‘war economy’ into a peace economy — creating jobs, dignity and shared destiny for millions of young Arabs.
If America remains engaged — clear‑eyed, strong‑handed and morally grounded — the ‘New Dawn’ President Trump proclaimed before the Knesset could become the defining achievement of our era. But if Washington drifts or the world looks away, Gaza’s fragile peace will fade into memory, and the old fires will reignite.
Yet hope endures. Across the Middle East, from Jerusalem to Riyadh, young men and women are daring to imagine a future not ruled by grievance but by greatness. Trade routes reopen. Technology hubs rise. Faith and freedom, long estranged, begin to walk together.
The Middle East has lived too long in the valley of shadows. Now it stands on the ridge of renewal — and if America continues to lead with faith and firmness, the dawn that rose over Gaza could light the world.
Former Vice President Kamala Harris said her onetime boss, former President Joe Biden, made a ‘big mistake’ by not inviting Tesla CEO Elon Musk to a 2021 White House event on electric vehicles.
In August 2021, Biden hosted an EV event at the White House with executives from General Motors, Ford and Stellantis, but Musk was not invited, despite Tesla being the nation’s leading EV manufacturer.
‘I write in the book that I thought it was a big mistake to not invite Elon Musk when we did a big EV event,’ Harris told Fortune Editor-in-Chief Alyson Shontell on Tuesday at the news outlet’s Most Powerful Women Summit in Washington, D.C., referring to her memoir, ‘107 Days,’ in which she criticized Biden for initially running for re-election despite his health struggles.
‘I mean, here he is, the major American manufacturer of extraordinary innovation in this space,’ Harris said of Musk, who is also the CEO of SpaceX.
Musk’s snub was widely viewed as an effort to support the United Auto Workers and organized labor overall, since Tesla plants are not unionized. Harris wrote in her book that she believed Biden was ‘sending a message about Musk’s anti-union stance’ but that she thought excluding him as the top player in the field ‘simply doesn’t make sense.’
Then–White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki said the event featured ‘the three largest employers of the United Auto Workers,’ emphasizing that Tesla’s workers are not unionized.
Pressed on whether Musk’s snub was punishment for his workers not being unionized, Psaki told reporters: ‘I’ll let you draw your own conclusion.’
The Biden administration defended inviting only those automakers, calling them key partners in the president’s push for union jobs.
Harris said that presidents should ‘put aside political loyalties’ when it comes to recognizing technological innovation.
‘So, I thought that was a mistake, and I don’t know Elon Musk, but I have to assume that that was something that hit him hard and had an impact on his perspective,’ she said.
Musk did appear to take offense after he was not invited to the event, taking numerous jabs at Biden.
‘Yeah, seems odd that Tesla wasn’t invited,’ Musk wrote at the time on social media.
A month later, he said the Biden administration appeared to be ‘controlled by unions’ and was ‘not the friendliest administration.’
After Musk learned Tesla would not be invited, administration officials offered an apology, according to The Wall Street Journal. Biden aides later attempted to soothe things over, but tensions remained.
Harris’ comments on Tuesday mirrored a passage from her new book in which she wrote that the Biden administration’s move not to include Tesla was a mistake and that it appeared to alienate Musk, who later became one of current President Donald Trump’s top financial backers.
‘Musk never forgave it,’ she wrote.
Musk later endorsed Trump in the 2024 election and contributed roughly $300 million toward Republican campaign efforts.
The U.S. Department of State on Saturday warned there are ‘credible reports’ that Hamas may break the peace agreement with a ‘planned attack’ on Palestinian civilians.
‘This planned attack against Palestinian civilians would constitute a direct and grave violation of the ceasefire agreement and undermine the significant progress achieved through mediation efforts,’ the department said in a statement on social media. ‘The guarantors demand Hamas uphold its obligations under the ceasefire terms.’
The statement concluded, ‘The United States and the other guarantors remain resolute in our commitment to ensuring the safety of civilians, maintaining calm on the ground, and advancing peace and prosperity for the people of Gaza and the region as a whole.’
A ceasefire between Israel and Hamas went into effect last weekend after two years of war in the region following the Oct. 7, 2023, attacks in southern Israel.
On Monday, the 20 remaining surviving Israeli hostages were returned to Israel per the agreement, but more than a dozen remains of hostages who were killed are still under Hamas control.
The State Department added that ‘measures will be taken to protect the people of Gaza and preserve the integrity of the ceasefire’ if Hamas proceeds with the attack.
On Thursday, President Donald Trump issued a warning on Truth Social after footage circulated online showing Hamas fighters executing Palestinians in Gaza City’s main square.
‘If Hamas continues to kill people in Gaza, which was not the deal, we will have no choice but to go in and kill them,’ he wrote.
According to Reuters, at least 33 people were executed by Hamas in recent days in what officials described as a campaign to ‘show strength’ after the ceasefire. Israeli sources say most of those killed belonged to families accused of collaborating with Israel or supporting rival militias.
Trump later clarified that U.S. troops would not go into Gaza.
‘It’s not going to be us,’ he told reporters. ‘We won’t have to. There are people very close, very nearby that will go in and they’ll do the trick very easily, but under our auspices.’
Fox News’ Efrat Lachter and the Associated Press contributed to this report.
President Donald Trump recently awarded late Turning Point USA founder and CEO Charlie Kirk the Presidential Medal of Freedom just over one month after the activist was assassinated. Kirk was outspoken about his conservative and pro-life views, and his legacy has inspired a new wave of activism.
Shawn Carney, the president and CEO of 40 Days for Life, praised President Donald Trump as ‘the most pro-life president we’ve ever had,’ telling Fox News Digital that pro-life Americans were delighted to see the president honor Kirk.
‘It was so beautiful to see him honor Charlie,’ Carney said. ‘He represented freedom, and there would be no pro-life movement without free speech. Free speech is what 40 Days for Life is built on, it’s what the pro-Life dialogue is built upon. It’s [what] Charlie gave his life for, and it was really, really beautiful for all pro-life Americans to see him honored with the highest honor we have in our nation.’
Kirk was known for participating in debates across the country and the globe, often confronting his harshest critics. Carney believes that Kirk’s willingness to go into tough arenas as well as his approachable and ‘authentic’ nature drew young people to him and the pro-life movement.
‘Charlie was open and was honest, and he was also humble and willing to talk to you,’ Carney told Fox News Digital, adding that being approachable, as Kirk was, is crucial in pro-life activism.
‘So many people have been hurt by abortion. So many people feel strongly in support of reproductive rights. And you just can’t go in and yell or say you’re going to burn in hell. You have to approachable, you have to use reason, you can’t be afraid to share your faith, as Charlie wasn’t,’ he added.
Carney said that 40 Days for Life has seen an uptick in interest, particularly among young activists, in the wake of Kirk’s assassination.
‘His tragic assassination was just two weeks before we kicked off one of our largest fall 40 Days for Life campaigns around the world,’ Carney said. ‘Over 700 cities participating, and we saw a huge uptick, a 36% increase in participation. We had so many young people come out… who knew who Charlie Kirk was, and were inspired by him to participate in 40 Days for Life, who then brought their parents out to pray at our vigils.’
He recalled one young woman — who he did not name — who said she was ‘so afraid’ to participate in pro-life activism prior to Kirk’s death. Carney noted that despite the ‘horrible images’ of the assassination, many felt empowered and compelled to speak up about their beliefs.
‘You thought the opposite would happen, that she’d be more afraid and others would be more afraid, but that didn’t happen,’ he said. ‘It literally inspired her to overcome years of fear.’
Carney also spoke about a TPUSA chapter leader whose mother tried to talk her son out of participating in either TPUSA or 40 Days for Life. The young man apparently told his mother that Charlie would have wanted him to speak out and not to run from culture wars.
When asked what Kirk’s message to pro-life activists would be if he were still alive, Carney said it would be to not give up. Carney added that he has heard newcomers inspired by Kirk say they believe that the TPUSA founder would want them to be outspoken and not to ‘cower.’
‘Right now in our culture, there’s a lot of reasons to be afraid, we can’t give in to them, we have to go out, we have to speak the truth and love, and that is what changes hearts and minds, and that’s the best way we can honor Charlie,’ Carney told Fox News Digital.