When Utah’s Gov. Spencer Cox announced the manhunt was over for Charlie Kirk’s shooter, he asked a nation still reeling from the shock of another political assassination to turn down the political rhetoric and find ways to “disagree better.”

“To my young friends,“ he said, ”you are inheriting a country where politics feels like rage. Your generation has an opportunity to build a culture that is very different than what we are suffering through right now.”

Rage seems everywhere: road rage, cancel culture, “daddy rage,” social media weaponization, keyboard rage, consumer outrage and gamer rage are just a few common terms that illustrate our collective willingness to become very angry quickly and with very little provocation.

Gov. Cox said that we are all somewhat complicit by allowing “

See Full Page