Utah Gov. Spencer Cox (R) told 60 Minutes on Sunday that his mind cannot stop replaying the devastating viral clip of conservative activist Charlie Kirk being shot and killed at an event in his state earlier this month.
âI cant unsee it â I canât stop seeing it. Every time I close my eyes, thatâs what I see,â Cox said.
The Republican governor was the first guest interviewed by the CBS program, which started its 58th season on Sunday. Cox told correspondent Scott Pelley he felt ânoxiousâ when he had to call President Donald Trump and deliver the news that Kirk â who had helped the president win the support of millions of young voters â had died.
He also said, a moment earlier, he is not interested in an overly sentimental embrace between Democrats and Republicans.
âI get accused on the right all the time of â I just want people to have a Kumbaya moment; I want people to hold hands and just hug it out,â Cox said. âAnd weâre done with that. Weâre done holding hands and hugging it out. Iâm not asking anybody to hold hands and hug it out. Iâm not asking for that. Iâm trying to get people to stop shooting each other. Thatâs it.â
Coxâs 60 Minutes interview comes a few weeks after Kirk was murdered at Utah Valley University on Sept. 10. The 31-year-old Kirk was hit by a single shot to the neck â some gruesome clips on X showed blood gushing from Kirkâs neck immediately after being hit â with his wife and two kids in attendance.
The reported details about Tyler Robinson, the 22-year-old killer, point to him being left-leaning. Robinson reportedly had a romantic relationship with his trans roommate, used phrases associated with Antifa, and, in text messages that were released last week, said he shot Kirk because of the conservative influencerâs âhatred.â
Pelley on Sunday asked Cox, âWho do you blame for the divisionâ that led to Kirkâs killing. Cox pointed to social media, saying:
âI do believe that social media is a cancer, and it is taking all of our worse impulses and putting them on steroids It is driving us to division, to hate. These algorithms that have captured our very souls, theyâve captured our free agency. These dopamine hits that get our young people â and our old people â addicted to outrage and hate. That serve us up on a regular basis⊠are absolutely leading us down a very dark path.â
You can watch part of his interview above, via CBS.
The post âI Canât STOP Seeing Itâ: Utah Gov. Spencer Cox Haunted By Charlie Kirk Shooting Video first appeared on Mediaite.