Boston, MA — Turning Point USA founder and human thumb Charlie Kirk has announced he no longer needs glasses—not because of Lasik or improved vision, but because, according to him, his eyes have drifted so close together that a single monocle can now cover both.
“My vision has evolved. I don’t need glasses anymore because my alpha DNA has merged my field of view into one centralized beam of American masculinity,” Kirk said at a Turning Point event held in a Harvard parking lot. “Binoculars are for Democrats,” Kirk added while squinting through what looked like a keychain ring with a sheet of Saran Wrap taped to it. “Why would you need two lenses when God only gave you one brain? Check mate, liberals.”
Critics were quick to point out that Kirk’s latest revelation comes suspiciously close to the launch of his new line of Turning Point USA Monoculars, a product he says is “for real men who dominate debates and also have a limited field of vision.” The monoculars, which retail for $199.99 and come in patriotic camo with an engraved bald eagle screaming directly into a copy of the Constitution, are reportedly being marketed as an “optical declaration of alpha status.”

The internet, as expected, responded with memes, confusion, and the usual reminder that Kirk continues to engage in the nation’s most one-sided intellectual bloodsport: arguing with 18-year-old college freshmen who accidentally wandered into his “debate” booths thinking they were handing out club flyers. Instead of offering coherent arguments, Kirk is famous for talking over his opponents at the speed of an auctioneer on Adderall, before abruptly declaring victory and posing for a selfie with a kid in a Gadsden flag hoodie.
While ophthalmologists remain skeptical of Kirk’s optical claims, insiders say he’s already working on a follow-up product: Turning Point USA Periscopes, designed to help the faithful “see over the mainstream media’s lies, but only from the right side.”
At press time, Kirk was last seen furiously wiping fog off his monocle after a brief panic attack when someone on campus mentioned the word “nuance.”