Charleston White explains why he DISRESPECTED Charlie Kirk, believes D4vd is INNOCENT
Charleston White Goes Off: Why He Disrespected Charlie Kirk & Thinks D4vd Is Innocent
Okay, so if you’ve been anywhere near the internet lately, you’ve probably seen Charleston White’s name floating around again — and surprise, surprise, he’s stirring the pot. This time, it’s over two very different situations: his wild comments about Charlie Kirk and his unexpected defense of rising artist D4vd in the wake of the Celeste Rivas case.
Let’s unpack both.
👎 “I Don’t Care”: Charleston White on Charlie Kirk’s Death
First up — the Charlie Kirk situation. In case you missed it, Charleston went fully unfiltered after news broke of Kirk’s death (a shooting that’s still under investigation, by the way). Instead of offering sympathy or staying quiet, Charleston basically said, “Good riddance.”
No, really — he straight-up called it “white-on-white crime”, laughed about it, and said he didn’t care because “nobody cares when it happens to us.”
And just when you thought he might dial it back — he doubled down. He insulted Kirk’s children, used profanity, and made it crystal clear he didn’t feel bad. Harsh? Absolutely. But there’s a method to his madness… at least, according to him.
So why did he go there?
Charleston says his reaction is about exposing the double standard. In his eyes, if a Black activist had been killed, there wouldn’t be this level of outrage, candlelight vigils, or media obsession.
To paraphrase: “Y’all didn’t care when Nipsey got shot. But now everyone’s mourning Charlie Kirk like he was a saint?”
It’s a heavy-handed way to make a point — and plenty of people feel like he crossed a line. I mean, yeah, there’s truth in the idea that not all lives are treated equally in the media. But laughing at a man’s death? That’s where most people hit “unsubscribe.”
🎧 Meanwhile… D4vd Is Under Fire — and Charleston’s Defending Him
Switch gears to something more recent: the tragic death of 17-year-old Celeste Rivas, who was found in a Tesla reportedly tied to musician D4vd. That news blew up fast — and the internet wasted no time accusing D4vd of everything under the sun.
But here comes Charleston White again — this time, taking a completely different tone.
He’s actually defending D4vd.
Here’s what he’s saying:
“Y’all would’ve arrested him already if he did it.”
White points out that D4vd hasn’t been arrested or charged. In his mind, if authorities really had something on him, he wouldn’t be out in public — period.
He’s cooperating.
D4vd canceled his tour dates, is reportedly talking to investigators, and hasn’t tried to flee or go silent. That’s not the behavior of someone who’s guilty, according to Charleston.
Black celebrities don’t usually get this treatment.
Here’s where Charleston flips the conversation — again. He says if a regular Black man had been connected to a dead teenager found in his car, “they wouldn’t be talking about no tour cancellations — they’d be in jail.”
There’s no evidence of a crime — yet.
Yes, the internet is speculating about a relationship between D4vd and the victim, but White argues there’s no proof of wrongdoing. And until there is, the public’s basically trying him in the court of TikTok.
So what’s the takeaway?
Whether or not you agree with Charleston’s defense of D4vd, he’s clearly trying to point out that justice looks very different depending on who you are — and how famous you are.
But again, it’s all in the delivery. Charleston isn’t exactly known for saying things gently — and sometimes his good points get buried under the messiness.
🧠 Final Thoughts
Charleston White is a complicated figure — part shock-jock, part social critic, part walking controversy. Love him or hate him, he always finds a way to say the things that make people uncomfortable.
When it comes to Charlie Kirk, he went full scorched earth — not because he hated Kirk personally (maybe he did, who knows), but because he wanted to call out how race plays into public sympathy.
With D4vd, it’s the opposite. He’s asking people to chill out and let the facts come out before crucifying a young Black artist who hasn’t even been charged.
Does Charleston always hit the mark? Absolutely not.
But does he raise some uncomfortable truths about media bias, race, and justice? Honestly… yeah, sometimes he does.
Let’s just hope people can separate the message from the messenger — and maybe stop looking to Charleston White for moral guidance altogether.