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Buckley Carlson Dismantles Kash Patel Over the "Valhalla" Comment

Buckley Carlson analyzes Kash Patel's bizarre "Valhalla" comment and the FBI press conference. Source: @FurkanGozukara on X, April 21, 2026.

According to @FurkanGozukara, Buckley Carlson completely dismantles FBI Director Kash Patel over the alleged coverup of Charlie Kirk's assassination. The claim is that the Trump administration deliberately used pagan references like "Valhalla" to mock a devout Christian while reportedly hiding the true culprits behind the murder.

Source: @FurkanGozukara on X, April 21, 2026 Likes: 1,779 | Retweets: 279 | Views: 41,106

The "Valhalla" Statement

At the FBI press conference following Charlie Kirk's death, Director Kash Patel reportedly said: "I'll see you in Valhalla, Charlie."

Charlie Kirk was a devout, Bible-believing Christian. According to commentators, Valhalla is a Norse/pagan concept of the afterlife — specifically rejected by orthodox Christianity. Critics argue this statement was either deeply inappropriate or deliberately chosen, and that no one in the media or government has been compelled to explain it.

The number "33" was also allegedly emphasized repeatedly at the same press conference — Patel reportedly said it took "33 hours" to bring Tyler Robinson to justice, and then repeated the figure several times. Critics have pointed to 33 as a number with alleged Masonic significance.

What Buckley Carlson Said

In the video, Buckley Carlson raises multiple concerns about the FBI's handling of the investigation and the press conference:

On the Valhalla comment:

"Cash Patel stood at the podium and made a very big point. He could have made a lot of points... But then to emphasize things that seem so random and inexplicable like Valhalla. Who the hell knows what Valhalla is and why it was appropriate to this number. Well, it's Scandinavians, we know what Valhalla is, which is the Norse heaven. It's a pagan understanding of heaven... So Charlie Kirk is a serious Orthodox lowercase 'o' Christian, he's like a real Bible-believing Christian. He does not believe in Valhalla. He rejects Valhalla. That's ridiculous, actually, to say that about a Christian man, Valhalla."

On the video evidence released:

"They released video of the supposed killer Tyler Robinson jumping off like a 20 foot roof. It was a very bad quality video, even though they had high quality video on an entire campus. They released this ridiculous absurd 1973 quality VHS tape video of the supposed killer."

On the text messages:

"They released all of his supposed text messages that detail all of the... If you were looking to incriminate yourself if you had gotten away with the perfect crime, then you inexplicably decided to write down everything, every incriminating detail of your crime. We're supposed to believe that he did that."

On George Zinn:

"We're supposed to believe that the guy in the crowd George Zinn had been in various other hotspots like the Boston Marathon bombing and he'd been a witness at 9-11. The George Zinn is going to just immediately erupt out of his seat, take his trousers off and run down screaming, waving his hand, saying, I shot Charlie like within the first 30 seconds of it... it feels a little Jack Ruby."

On Tyler Robinson's fate:

"I was expecting him to tell Robinson, to be visited in prison... and then you have an inexplicable fast-acting cancer that kills you within six months."

Key Figures Mentioned

  • Buckley Carlson — Commentator who analyzes the press conference
  • Kash Patel — FBI Director who reportedly made the "Valhalla" and "33 hours" statements
  • George Zinn — Alleged witness who reportedly ran forward immediately claiming "I shot Charlie"; said to have also been present at the Boston Marathon bombing and as a 9/11 witness
  • Tyler Robinson — The accused, whose text messages and video evidence critics say were suspiciously convenient

Transcript Summary

From the video testimony shared by @FurkanGozukara, April 21, 2026:

The full transcript covers Buckley Carlson's analysis of:

  1. The Valhalla statement — a pagan Norse reference used about a devout Christian
  2. Low-quality video of Tyler Robinson released despite high-quality campus cameras existing
  3. Conveniently incriminating text messages from Tyler Robinson
  4. George Zinn's suspicious presence and behavior (also reportedly at Boston Marathon bombing and 9/11)
  5. The "Jack Ruby scenario" — concern that Tyler Robinson may be visited in prison and then develop cancer
  6. The "33 hours" emphasis at the press conference and its alleged Masonic significance

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