Columnist fired by positions after Kirk Shooting speaks: I was fired because I mentioned the breed
UPDATE: September 16: After this story was published, the media reporter Oliver Darcy published the Attiah termination letter, which was written by Wayne Connell, director of Human Resources of the Washington Post. Attiah confirmed the authenticity of the letter to News themezone. “His publications in Bluesky (which clearly identify him as post columnist) about white men in response to the murder of Charlie Kirk do not comply with our [social media] Politics, “Connell wrote. Later, he said that Attiah’s” bad judgment “emerged” in the context of documented performance concerns, which have been raised with you. “
PREVIOUSLY: Karen Attiah, an outstanding columnist of the opinion of Washington Post, said Monday that he had been fired by publications on social networks after the murder of conservative activist Charlie Kirk.
Kirk received a deadly shot last week, supposedly for a lonely gunman who is now in police custody.
Attiah’s shot adds to generalized effort to take energetic measures to the political left And those Kirk critic – WHO introduced a new generation to the extreme right beliefs – And it serves as the last example of the continuous evolution of the publication towards hyper-conservative Opinion pages.
During his 11 years in the position, Attiah wrote columns, was the first Global Opinion Editorand shared a George Polk 2019 award With the writer David Ignatius “for eloquence and resolution to demand responsibility following the horrible murder of the columnist after Jamal Khashoggi.”
“I was the last full -time black opinion columnist in The Post, in one of the most diverse regions of the country. Washington DC no longer has an article that reflects the people it serves,” Attiah wrote in a subsack post Monday. “What happened to me is part of a Broader purge of black voices from the academy, business, government and media – A historical pattern as dangerous as shameful and tragic. “

Isabel Infantes through Getty Images
In February, Jeff Bezos, the owner of the post, announced that the document’s opinion section would be to “write every day in support and defense of two pillars: personal freedoms and free markets.” The opinion editor David Shipley resigned from change. The new editor, Adam O’Neal, said in June that the editors of the opinion page would be “without patriotic apologies” and that the philosophy of the section would be “rooted in the fundamental optimism about the future of this country.” Along the way, many journalists have left the newspaper.
Following the Kirk shooting, Attiah Murder clearly denouncedbut also published and published several opinions on armed violence and racism in the United States, as could be expected from an opinion writer.
However, Attiah was fired, as she described it, “speaking against political violence, the double racial standard and the apathy of the United States towards weapons.” She said that the position had claimed that her publications, on the Bluesky platform, were “unacceptable”, “serious misconduct” and endangered the physical security of their colleagues: “charges without evidence, which I completely rejected as false,” ATTIAH wrote.
“For the record. My posts were not Even About Kirk Directly, But About America’s Apathy Towards Political Violence, and The Coddling of White Male Shooters and Hate Peddoles,” She Added separately. “I was fired because I mentioned the race: White men and violence, that was my ‘serious behavior’.”
News themezone could not reach Attiah to make additional comments, and a spokesman for the publication refused to comment “on personnel matters.”
The Washington Post Guild, the newspaper employees union, condemned Attiah’s dismissal and said he would continue “supporting and defending his rights.”
The publication “flagrantly ignored the standard disciplinary processes” and “undermined his own mandate of being a defender of freedom of expression” by shooting Attiah “about his publications on social networks”, the leadership of the guild wrote in a statement on Monday.
Attiah highlighted some of his Bluesky publications in the Detection announcing that it had been fired:
Political violence does not take place in this country … but we will not do anything to stop the availability of weapons used to carry out such violence. The rhetoric of denial and empty is learned impotence, because the truth is … the United States is sick and there is no cure in sight.
-Karen Attiah (@karenattiah.bsky.social) 2025-09-10t21: 30: 09.516z
Because the United States, especially white America, is not going to do what you should do to get rid of weapons in your country. They will be thoughts and prayers, “violence does not take place” due to a goodness of goodness, not of the resolution to convince their communities to disarm.
-Karen Attiah (@karenattiah.bsky.social) 2025-09-10t22: 05: 48.647z
That last publication is a slight wrong appointment. Kirk, in a 2023 discussion about affirmative action, did not refer to “black women” in general. On the other hand, according to a widely circulated clip, he called four black women in particular: journalist Joy Reid, former first lady Michelle Obama, the late representative Sheila Jackson Lee (D-Texas) and the Supreme Court Ketanji Brown Jackson, who had commented on most of the majority against the constitutionality of the affirmative action in colleges and universities.
“You do not have the brain processing power so that otherwise it takes it seriously,” Kirk said at that time, after referring to women. “You had to go to steal the slot of a white person to take something seriously.”
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We remain committed to providing unwavering journalism and based on facts that everyone deserves.
Thanks again for your support on the way. We are really grateful for readers like you! His initial support helped us take us here and reinforced our writing room, which kept us strong during uncertain times. Now as we continue, we need your help more than ever. We hope you join us once again.
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In addition to being an opinion journalist and subsidization author, Attiah is the creator of the “Resistance Summer School”, an online educational platform. The Platform will soon offer initial and intermediate level classes on “Race, media and international issues.”
Here we show you how to support my work: I will teach a version of my Columbia class on race, media and international matters 101 and 102 next month for @resistanceool.bsky.social. The course is online/ hybrid. The deadline is September 19! Register! www.resistancesummerschool.com/fall-2025-r …
-Karen Attiah (@karenattiah.bsky.social) 2025-09-15t12: 13: 51.327z


