Charlie Kirk, the conservative activist, made highly critical and controversial statements about Martin Luther King Jr. He called Martin Luther King Jr. "awful" and "not a good person," and rejected King's legacy. Kirk also described the Civil Rights Act of 1964, which King fought for, as a "huge mistake" and referred to it as an "anti-white weapon." He expressed the view that King was undeserving of the national holiday in his honor, saying King was "not worthy of godlike status" and labeled King's celebration as harmful. Kirk's stance was sharply critical, and he opposed affirmative action and diversity initiatives, attributing America's racial focus partly to the idolization of Martin Luther King Jr. Kirk's rhetoric included denying white privilege and even revising his past praise of King into outright rejection, calling King a "mythological anti-racist creation." These views were part of a broader controversial rhetoric that included conspiracy theories and racialized political commentary.