
A Think First Podcast with Jim Detjen
Think First is a short-form podcast that makes you pause — before you scroll, share, or believe the headline.
Hosted by Jim Detjen, a guy who’s been gaslit enough to start a podcast about it, Think First dives into modern narratives, media manipulation, and cultural BS — all through the lens of gaslighting and poetic truth.
Some episodes are two minutes. Some are ten. It depends on the story — and the energy drink situation.
No rants. No lectures. Just sharp questions, quick insights, and the occasional laugh to keep things sane.
Whether you’re dodging spin in the news, politics, or that “trust me, bro” post in your feed… take a breath. Think first.
Visit Gaslight360.com/clarity to sharpen your BS filter and explore the 6-step clarity framework.
A Think First Podcast with Jim Detjen
#67 Engraved Bullets · How the Charlie Kirk Story Is Already Being Written
Charlie Kirk was assassinated in Utah.
The rifle has been found. The bullets were engraved with words tied to ideology.
And before the facts are even settled, the headlines are already at war — some calling it a “shooting,” others a “killing,” still others an “assassination.”
This episode of Think First breaks down what we know, what we don’t, and how language itself is being used to gaslight the public. From engraved ammunition to Wikipedia edit wars, the narrative is moving faster than the investigation.
When the story spins this fast, clarity doesn’t come from chasing headlines. It comes from stepping back into the framework.
Visit Gaslight360.com/clarity to see how.
Stay sharp. Stay skeptical. #SpotTheGaslight
Read and reflect at Gaslight360.com/clarity
America just learned that the bullets which killed Charlie Kirk weren't ordinary rounds. They were engraved Engraved with words tied to transgender and anti-fascist ideology. So now the story isn't just about a sniper on a rooftop, it's about ammunition that came preloaded with politics. And today we're going there. This is Think First, where we don't follow the script. We question it Because in a world full of poetic truths and professional gaslighting, someone's got to say the quiet part out loud. Here's what's confirmed. Investigators recovered an older model .30 caliber hunting rifle in the woods near Utah Valley University, a towel wrapped around it, a spent cartridge still in the chamber, three live rounds in the magazine, and according to the Wall Street Journal, those rounds carried engravings, phrases linked to transgender and anti-fascist ideology, ravings, phrases linked to transgender and anti-fascist ideology. One round, one life taken. Charlie Kirk is gone, the rifle abandoned, the suspect vanished, the manhunt continues. That's the official record, that's the forensic trail, that's all we truly know For
Speaker 1:now. But facts never travel alone. They come wrapped in frames, and right now media and politics are scrambling to decide which frame you'll see first. Some outlets, all caps, confirmed the assassins' bullets carried leftist ideology. Others Hedge carefully. Sources say engravings exist. Investigators won't comment further. And still others will try not to mention it at all, because sometimes silence is its own form of narrative
Speaker 1:control. Engraved bullets that image is already cinematic. It's a symbol, not just evidence. Even if you never see a picture of them, you can already see them in your head. Brass casings with words carved in Identity, politics literally etched into lead. That's poetic truth. The symbol becomes larger than the fact. It's no longer about who fired the shot, but who wrote the message. And notice something else Even the words used to describe Kirk's death are dividing along invisible lines. Some outlets jumped straight to assassination, others stayed with shooting, still others split the difference with killing. That's not random. Assassination signals political intent. Shooting stays cautious, even sterile Killing acknowledges death but hedges the why. Check Wikipedia right now and you'll see the tug of war in real time. One page calls it a shooting, another calls it a
Speaker 1:killing. Editors are already debating whether assassination belongs in the headline. And here's the pattern Titles that emphasize manhunts and suspects. Lean shooting. Titles that emphasize political violence, lean assassination. Lean shooting. Titles that emphasize political violence, lean assassination. That's not just semantics. That's how history gets written before the facts are even in. Here's where clarity
Speaker 1:matters. Do engravings prove motive, maybe? Or do they simply provide a convenient symbol, something designed to be found, to be talked about, to hijack the story? Remember now the phrase. According to sources, if later reports walk this back, millions will still remember it as confirmed fact. That's how gaslighting works. Repeat something often enough and corrections never catch
Speaker 1:up. Instead of asking if people should think, force them to confront how they're already being manipulated, ask yourself 1. If engraved bullets are the evidence, why are headlines still arguing over whether Kirk was shot, killed or assassinated? 2. Who benefits when a single word in a headline shapes whether you see this as random violence or political execution? Three, why do some stories get called murder instantly, while others get softened into shooting, even when the FBI says assassination? Four, and here's the uncomfortable one if ammunition really carried ideology, was that meant to kill Kirk or to script the story you'd hear
Speaker 1:afterward. Engraved bullets may tell us who pulled the trigger, but the way this story gets engraved into memory, that will tell us who's shaping your reality. And when the narrative madness is spinning this fast, don't chase every headline. Go back to the framework. That's why we built it. Six steps to spot the gaslight before it burns you. You'll find it at gaslight360.com. Slash clarity. I'm Jim Detchen and you don't need all the answers, but you should question the ones you're handed. Until next time, stay skeptical, stay curious and always think first.