

Though she narrowly escaped being kicked off of all the committees on which she serves, far-left Democratic Representative Ilhan Omar of Minnesota is continuing her campaign of hate against slain conservative activist Charlie Kirk.
On Friday, Omar said Kirk’s memory and ideas belong in the “dustbin of history” because he “spewed” hate “every day.”
The remarks came two days after the House voted 214-213 to table a motion from GOP Representative Nancy Mace of South Carolina to boot Omar off all her committees because of previous remarks and her sharing a hate-Kirk video on X.
The latest deranged commentary invited another rebuke from pro golfer Phil Mickelson, who went after Omar last week on X. He wants Omar deported.
The Somali agent of influence, who married her brother to commit immigration and student-loan fraud, landed in hot water right after Kirk’s assassination on September 10 at Utah Valley University.
During an interview with anti-American leftist Mehdi Hasan, a British Pakistani with American citizenship and a big megaphone, Omar did lament the assassination. But then she fed listeners a heaping spoonful of hate-Kirk rhetoric.
Anyone who thinks Kirk wanted civil debate is “full of sh*t,” Omar said. And “there is nothing more f**ked up than to completely pretend that his words and actions have not been recorded and in existence for the last decade or so.”
That was bad enough. But the beturbaned foreigner also shared a video that viciously attacked Kirk and his supporters.
The video claimed that Kirk and his supporters have a “Christo-fascist agenda,” and that Kirk was a “reprehensible human being” who “enacted his political agenda by preying upon weak-minded people” and “pointing fingers at outgroups, demonizing those groups, and then siccing his massive following on them.”
He was a “stochastic terrorist” and “an adamant transphobe,” the narrator said. He “believed in the subjugation of women and with his last dying words he was spewing racist dog whistles,” the narrator continued. “Charlie Kirk was Doctor Frankenstein, and his monster shot him through the neck.”
Thus did Mace introduce a bill to kick Omar off committees. It would have passed but for four Republicans who might well find themselves primaried in next year’s elections. Those were Mike Flood of Nebraska, Jeff Hurd of Colorado, Cory Mills of Florida, and Tom McClintock of California.
Having learned that she will rarely be punished for outrageous remarks, Omar continued spewing hate during an interview with CNN’s hate-Trump hostess Kaitlan Collins.
Collins asked Omar why she reposted the hate-Kirk video, and Omar didn’t hold back.
“I do believe he was a reprehensible, hateful man,” she said.
After some nonsensical back-and-forth about whether Kirk was “reprehensible,” Collins said what likely upset people was the Frankenstein analogy:
Obviously this is a person, and looking at this, this is someone who was a husband and a father, and in the days after his shocking death, that happened as a result of his views, or happened as a result as he was sharing his views publicly with people, that people found it jarring to hear such criticism of that in the immediate aftermath.
What I find jarring is that there’s so many people willing to excuse the most reprehensible things that he said, that they agree with that, that they’re willing to have monuments for him, that they want to create a day to honor him, and that they want to produce resolutions in the House of Congress, honoring his life and legacy.
It is one thing to care about his life, because obviously so many people loved him, including his children and wife. But I am not going to sit here and be judged for not wanting to honor any legacy this man has left behind. That should be in the dustbin of history, and we should hopefully move on and forget the hate that he spewed every single day.
Mickelson was ready with a reply over Ryan Saavedra’s post about the exchange, reprising President Donald Trump’s claim that Omar committed immigration fraud.
“Ilhan spews hate every time she opens her mouth, she came here fraudulently and will hopefully be sent back to Somalia soon,” the three-time Master’s tourney champion wrote on X.
The post continued Mickelson’s commentary about Kirk’s assassination in general and Omar in particular.
Last week, Mickelson reposted Mace, who wrote on her personal X account that “we would love to see you deported back to Somalia next.”
Also last week, Mickelson and other athletes went after the leftists who celebrated Kirk’s assassination, as The New American reported.
“I never met Charlie Kirk but I am gutted by this atrocity,” he wrote on September 11:
Open debate is healthy and essential. Free speech is a constitutional right. Violence for disagreeing with someone is sick, deranged, and creates a greater division that becomes harder to overcome.
Over video of the Oxford Union president backing Kirk’s murder, Mickelson wrote that the crime “is bringing out some of the best in humanity and it’s also exposing some of the worst.”
“The unification, love, support, and outcry on his behalf throughout the world is heartwarming,” he continued:
[But] the number of people supporting Tyler Robinson’s appalling behavior has opened my eyes to a side of extremism with a moral superiority complex that has also shaken my belief in people in general. I hope they are held accountable for their disgusting rhetoric.
Mickelson also posted frequently during Kirk’s memorial yesterday.
“Charlie Kirk bringing everyone together,” he wrote over a photo of President Trump and Elon Musk.
“Incredible and inspiring,” he wrote over video of the crowd posted by Casino actor and Trump backer James Woods.