Charlie Kirk is perhaps best known for demanding that online strangers debate him and starting Turning Point USA, the conservative college student group that had members wear diapers in public to prove how grown-up they were.

Kirk is one of the most successful examples of a spate of millennial talking heads trying to rebrand conservatism by claiming it's new and edgy to repeat common right-wing talking points. It's a model that younger conservatives like Kent State Gun Girl are trying desperately to copy. But apparently, he's reviled even by members of his own organization.

Will Sommer, who covers conservative media, writes in The Daily Beast that at a Turning Point USA conference this past December, organizers debuted an event-specific app to let attendees communicate with each other. It immediately devolved into attendees making fun of Kirk and sharing "photoshopped pictures of Kirk’s face distorted for comical effect." Specifically, they were making his face super tiny. You know, like this:

Grace Johnson, a college student who attended the conference, shared a meme and found herself booted from the Turning Points app, though the organization claims they were moderating people for anti-semitism. Turning Point has also provided a lot of fodder for this with a PR campaign of Kirk looking pensive in front of a white background with smarmy quotes. It's extremely low-hanging fruit for trolls.

The moral of the story is that not everyone at Turning Points is thrilled with the spotlight-hogging Kirk. Among other things, there's dissent over how he handled Kanye West's sudden support and then abandonment earlier in 2018, and the organization has faced claims of sexual harassment and assault at previous events. Some members even started a splinter group where they could air their grievances. Per the Daily Beast:

Heal Our Voice’s website is filled with a number of anonymous gripes, ranging from Kirk’s celebrity status on the right to an alleged hard-partying atmosphere at Turning Point conferences. In a statement, Turning Point says underage drinking is grounds for attendees to be expelled from conferences.

Johnson told The Daily Beast that she joined Heal Our Voice in part because of a feeling that some political views are off-limits at Turning Point events.

“Charlie Kirk can be a little bit of a snowflake—or a lot a bit of a snowflake,” she said.

Of course, Fox News is always in the market for one more loud racist, so Kirk may not be out of luck if TPUSA completely turns on him. And he'd have the added bonus of never dealing with anyone born after the Nixon administration ever again.