DaHighestLife
56.6K posts

DaHighestLife
@DaHighestLife
Vita Benedictio Est ✝️ Husband, dad, I stream sometimes, Gardener, Beach life, photographer, ประเทศไทย, Maui, USA first, *All pictures and videos are mine*










Charlie Kirk Investigation--Case Closed? Today we found out that the likely ammo was 150 grain Remington Core-lokt. So, instead of listening to Pizza Delivery Guys, I searched and found a non-biased video demonstration shot 3 years ago and plugged those numbers into Grok to determine if this bullet fits the wound and what we saw with Charlie. According to Grok: A bullet exhibiting 2.7x expansion combined with 91% weight retention and moderate fragmentation aligns exceptionally well with the reported characteristics of Charlie Kirk’s neck wound. Upon impact with soft tissue at high velocity, the soft-point design (such as a 150-grain Core-Lokt-style projectile) would rapidly mushroom to roughly 2.7 times its original diameter. This creates a dramatically wider permanent crush cavity right from the outset, far exceeding the original .30-caliber profile. In the confined anatomy of the neck, this expansion would immediately lacerate major blood vessels like the carotid artery or jugular vein over a broad area, producing the rapid, high-volume hemorrhage observed in eyewitness accounts and forensic descriptions. The high weight retention (around 91%) ensures the bullet core and most of the mass stay together as a single heavy, expanded projectile while still allowing some fragmentation. This prevents over-penetration and explains the absence of an exit wound: the deformed bullet, now presenting a much larger frontal surface, decelerates quickly after transferring the majority of its kinetic energy into the neck structures. Any bone contact with the cervical vertebrae would exacerbate fragmentation—shedding jacket pieces or lead core bits as secondary missiles—while the retained main mass continues to carve a destructive path. This combination produces the irregular, larger-than-expected wound channel and extensive internal tearing without the bullet exiting the body. Together, these performance traits create the exact catastrophic, unsurvivable injury profile described in the case. Massive temporary cavitation from the rifle-velocity round stretches and ruptures surrounding tissues, while the expanded and partially fragmented projectile maximizes energy dump in a vital zone packed with critical anatomy. The result is immediate incapacitation through vascular collapse, potential spinal involvement, and uncontrollable bleeding—all without the dramatic “head explosion” some claim—matching the no-exit, fragment-recovered, and rapidly fatal outcome reported. In other words, This Case is just about closed. It would NOT BLOW HIS HEAD OFF as many have claimed. I feel safe using this video, it was done well before Charlie was shot, the results are honest. So, the IMPOSSIBLE WOUND is now the very likely wound. The exploding mic is a joke. Now, the narrative really starts falling apart. note the name of the demo, INCONSISTENCY KING. youtube.com/watch?v=lCwuAU…






To believe that Jack Posobiec and the Epstein binder Jew crew saw high-quality 4K video of Tyler Robinson shooting Charlie Kirk, you would have to ignore the fact that the prosecution told the court there is absolutely no video of Tyler Robinson shooting Charlie Kirk.

I’m no fan of how Benny has handled (or failed to address) Candace amid all this, but this video is a must-watch. He breaks down what he could see in the high-resolution courtroom footage and more importantly, what the public video feed couldn’t capture: the raw emotion in the room, Charlie’s family sobbing, Erika in Mrs. Kirk’s arms, and Tyler Robinson sitting there pale and withdrawn. Worth your time. youtu.be/XSD-Tu42M4c?is…


You could shoot 100 human necks with 100 of the most perfectly manufactured identical 30-06 rounds and get 100 different results. Bullets do weird shit. Your favorite "expert" being unable to recreate what happened is not proof that it didn't happen. Sorry but it's not.






















