Day: September 12, 2025
CONFIRMED: THEY GOT HIM
Charlie Kirk’s assassin caught.Tyler Robinson, 22, turned in by his own father – a Utah sheriff – after confessing to the fatal rooftop shot at UVU.
FBI eyes death penalty. No motive yet.
#TylerRobinson #CharlieKirk #FBI #CharlieKirkdead x.com/RTB_io/status/1966498268718027008— RTB_io (@RTB_io) Sep 12, 2025
#FBI #Counterintelligence, pay #Attention!
Tyler Robinson is the spiritual “son” of ROBIN Westman – this is the message.
And this is the attempt by Putin, his Intel, and the ROChurch, as the KGB’s Ideology Department, to concoct some mythical global LGBT ideology to focus the current Russia – West conflict against the Gays and against the Freedom, in their appeal to the conservative America.
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share.google/aimode/Xj6MGqS1…
Tyler Robinson as the alleged gunman
. A suspect was taken into custody on Friday, September 12, 2025, after a two-day manhunt.Tyler Robinson, a 22-year-old from Utah, has been identified by multiple law enforcement sources as the suspect in the fatal shooting of conservative activist Charlie Kirk
Key details regarding the case include:
Arrest and surrender: President Donald Trump announced that a suspect had been taken into custody, stating that a person “very close” to the individual turned him in. According to reports, the suspect’s father, a former law enforcement official, along with a minister, was instrumental in his surrender.
Victim and location: The victim, 31-year-old Charlie Kirk, was the founder of the conservative organization Turning Point USA. He was shot and killed on Wednesday, September 10, 2025, during an event at Utah Valley University.
Crime scene: Authorities believe the suspect fired a high-powered, bolt-action rifle from a rooftop approximately 200 yards away from the event. After the shooting, the individual was seen fleeing the scene.
Manhunt: Law enforcement agencies, including the FBI, launched a large-scale search following the shooting. The FBI had released photos of a person of interest and offered a reward of up to $100,000 for information leading to an arrest.
Confirmation of identity: Following Trump’s announcement, media outlets such as The Associated Press, NBC News, and The New York Post identified the suspect as Tyler Robinson, citing unnamed law enforcement sources.
Political motive: A potential motive for the attack is not yet known.— Michael Novakhov (@mikenov) Sep 12, 2025
Maskot/Getty Images/Maskot
- Gen Z slang, powered by the internet, changes quickly.
- Some popular slang terms in 2025 originated in Black, LGBTQ+, and gamer communities.
- “Crashing out” and “locking in” are some of the most popular slang terms this year.
Keeping up with the terms your Gen Z coworker is using can feel like a full-time job of its own.
While they might poke fun at you for your outdated slang — not very “groovy” of them — younger generations are just doing what every generation before them has done: evolving language.
Sometimes, this just looks like repeating words and phrases without being overly discerning about where they came from.
“The internet is just one big gigantic seventh grade where you are looking for the coolest kid and you’re going to follow what they do without thinking real hard,” Jessi Grieser, an associate professor of linguistics at the University of Michigan, told Business Insider.
“The issue that we’re coming into now,” Grieser said, “is that it’s a little easier for those insider terms to escape and eventually become separated from the group in such a way that we sometimes don’t notice that that word originally came from there.”
This sometimes results in words and phrases that originated in Black and LGBTQ+ communities being adapted by broader audiences, and often developing new meanings altogether.
While the process of word adoption is the same as it has always been with previous generations, Grieser said, the speed at which it’s happening is what sets the internet generations apart from their older counterparts.
And although you might not know exactly what some of Gen Z’s words mean, chances are they aren’t using them to make fun of you, Kelly Wright, an assistant professor of linguistics at the University of Wisconsin—Madison, told Business Insider.
“Just look up ‘cringe’ and try not to be that,” Wright said.
Here are 14 slang terms from Gen Z — defined by the Pew Research Center as people born between 1997 and 2012 — that will help you not feel so out of the loop in 2025.
