Another
school shooting tragedy. It seems like the current Congress is
unwilling to budge on gun restrictions of any kind. There was a time
was Congress was very willing to pass gun control laws. The time was
in 1968 when the Black Panther Party was exercising its
constitutional right to bear arms as it conducted police patrols and
defended the party headquarters. White men making laws decided Black
men bearing arms was not their idea of upholding the Second
Amendment.
Then
California Governor Ronald Reagan response to the Black Panthers was
there is “no reason why on the street today a citizen should be
carrying loaded weapons.” Translation: Disarm Black people.
The
years of 1967 and 1968 were particularly violent—Dr. Martin
Luther King and Robert Kennedy were assassinated, uprisings in major
U.S. cities, etc. Then came the first major gun laws in about 30
years. The Omnibus Crime Control and Safe Streets Act of 1968, and
the Gun Control Act of 1968 were gifts from Congress.
It
seems as if nothing can move Congress on gun laws. There was no
action by Congress when one of their own (Gabrielle Gifford) was
thrust into the national media story as a target of gun violence in
2011. No action when young children at Sandy Hook Elementary School
became casualties the following year. The National Rifle Association
doubled-down in its resistance and Congress bowed down to the NRA.
In
the heat of the Black Power Movement, H. Rap Brown said that violence
was as American as cherry pie. I thought about the provocative quote
from the former chair of the Non-Violent Student Coordinating
Committee (SNCC) as the news of the latest mass shooting broke in
Parkland, Florida. We have come to accept this man-made condition as
our reality.
We
have accepted this reality because as we have refused to get to the
roots of our violence problem. Instead, we choose to arm ourselves to
deal with anticipated, inevitable violence that is happening all
around us on so many levels. Face it: We are a violent nation.
It’s
not just about the growing and more deadly massacres carried out by
mainly white males with automatic weapons. I’m talking about
police violence, military violence, state executions, domestic
violence, sexual violence, gender violence, racial violence,
religious violence, intra-race community violence. There’s
bullying by all ages. There’s the mayhem and destruction caused
by policy and legislation. Violence is most thought of in terms of
physical violence, but it’s also verbal, psychological,
cultural and social. We Are A Violent Nation.
If
we really start to get to the root of U.S. violence, we will come
front and center with the system of capitalism that relies heavily on
working class people blaming the “other” while the One
Percenters watch in delight all the way to the banks. Who gets the
good-paying jobs, who gets the harshest prison sentence, who gets the
substandard house in a hyper-segregated neighborhood, who gets access
to quality education—all these indicators that affect quality
of life are daily, controlled battles designed to keep us busy and
stressed while a growing oligarchy dismantles any semblance of
democratic structures and processes. It’s about being more
sophisticated in our efforts to expose and root out patriarchal
violence that lives in racism, homo/trans phobia, Islamophobia and
poverty.
There’s
over 300 million licensed guns in this country. For some, this is a
big problem. However, when you have a violent person, not only does
everybody and everything look like a nail, but anything can be used
as a hammer. This is about our collective propensity towards
violence. Violence against the other.
I
understand people have a right to bear arms and to protect their
families. I believe the debate will shift to the who and the why. Who
gets to buy guns? Who gets to use them? Who are the targets? What
would happen if the active shooters were predominantly young, Black
men instead of white males? If Black people walked around openly
carrying legal and licensed weapons, would our rights to bear arms be
protected and upheld?
Let’s
have a robust public conversation about violence, about guns, about
legal protections. Let’s imagine that it’s 1968. Perhaps
the imagery of those times could give us perspective.
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