I
have always had enormous admiration for Congressman John Lewis
(D-GA), and that admiration increased exponentially when I
watched him lead dozens of his Congressional colleagues to
sit-in on the floor of Congress to force a vote on gun
control. As the supercilious Paul Ryan called for
“decorum” (where is the decorum in a man walking
into a nightclub with an automatic weapon and gunning 49 people
down), determined Democrats disrupted proceedings in the House
of Representatives. Right on.
Congressman
Lewis tweeted, “Sometimes you have to get in the way. You
have to make some noise by speaking up and speaking out against
injustice & inaction”. He is frustrated, as are
many voters, about the fact that Congress has failed to take a
position on background checks and the availability of assault
weapons. House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi (D-CA)
is equally frustrated, saying, “Moments of silence aren’t
substitute for the action needed on gun violence.”
Republicans have attempted to deflect, suggesting that the
focus should be ISIS and terrorism, not gun violence. But
the Newtown, Connecticut shooter was not a terrorist connected
to ISIS. Indeed, troubled white men perpetrated many of
our recent mass shootings with access to guns, not ISIS loyal
terrorists. No matter. Can’t Congress walk
and chew gum at the same time? Can’t they focus
both on ISIS and on our out-of-control gun culture?
Nobody
is talking about repealing the Second Amendment (though that
might not be a bad idea). Still, the “right to bear
arms” does not mean the unfettered right to bear all
kinds of arms. Nobody needs an automatic weapon.
And anyone deemed dangerous or mentally ill needs never be
allowed a gun purchase. The National Rifle Association
(NRA) is an irresponsible organization that elevates the right
for any random citizen to own and bear arms over the right of
other citizens to survive. Members of Congress need to
cut the cord from that organization. Voters need to back
them up.
One
might think the Congressional sit-in has yielded few results.
House Speaker Paul Ryan pulled the plug on CSPAN coverage and
dismissed the sit-in as a “stunt”. Still,
responding to the fact that 90 percent of us in the United
States support background checks and restrictions on access to
weapons, those who sat in showed enormous courage. And,
taking advantage of social media, they broadcast their sit-in
using Periscope, reminding Ryan that he might control CSPAN,
but he doesn’t control all broadcast.
Ryan
was insulting and condescending in calling the sit-in a
“stunt”, and he reminded me of the many reasons I
so admire Congressman John Lewis. Was the Atlanta
Congressman’s skull fractured in a “stunt” in
1965 on Bloody Sunday, when his civil rights activity caused
rabid whites to attack him? Lewis pulled no stunt; he
stood for what he believed in then. He is standing,
firmly in his belief now, and using the time-honored tactic of
protest to bring attention to the important cause of gun
control.
Congressman
Lewis and his colleagues were not successful in forcing votes
on gun control. But they were successful in shutting the
House down. Speaker Ryan was forced to adjourn Congress
before he planned to, and Republicans sulked off like thieves
in the night. Democrats held the floor hours after the
Republicans scurried away, like hungry rats. No vote was
forced, but a point was made.
Congress
goes back to work on July 5. People should urge their
representatives to take an appropriate vote to reduce access to
guns, especially for those on a “no fly” list.
People should also give Congressman John Lewis a “shout
out” and appreciation for his leadership. He has
taken the tactics of the 60s and taken them into the
twenty-first century. He has reminded us that “stunts”
have their purpose. His unassailable moral courage is
admirable. Thank you, Congressman Lewis, for your
activism in the 1960s and now. You are much appreciated!