In an era where celebrity petitions range from demanding Shrek 5 to insisting Nicolas Cage be named “National Treasure” for real, one petition has dwarfed them all: **the drive to nominate the late Charlie Kirk for TIME Magazine’s Person of the Year**. Within just three weeks of its launch, the campaign has already surpassed 50 million signatures, breaking records and baffling online organizers who initially thought they’d be lucky to crack 100,000.

The website hosting the petition, *ChangeForCharlie.com*, has crashed five times since last Friday. “Our servers were not designed to handle this much freedom,” admitted site administrator Greg Dawson, who confessed that even Amazon Web Services had to “scale patriotically” to keep up.
The movement isn’t limited to America. Fans across the globe have logged on to digitally pledge their support. Reports show that a surprising 7% of the signatures came from Poland, while an inexplicable 3% originated from Iceland, where locals claim Kirk’s speeches were “as comforting as fermented shark.”
Even in countries that openly mock American politics, support has trickled in. One French student, signing the petition, wrote: *“Je ne sais pas qui est Charlie Kirk, mais j’aime les pétitions.”* TIME editors are reportedly investigating whether non-English signatures count, though one unnamed source admitted: “At this point, democracy has spoken. In 50 million fonts.”
The editors of TIME are now in a bind. Traditionally, the Person of the Year is awarded to someone who has influenced events, for better or worse. Charlie Kirk’s supporters argue his assassination galvanized millions and his legacy reshaped political discourse overnight.
“TIME gave it to Hitler once,” remarked Turning Point USA’s Andrew Kolvet. “If they can give it to Hitler, they can give it to Charlie. Frankly, if they don’t, it’s fake news.”


