The
latest school mass shooting in Florida, and the unfolding debate over
gun control and gun violence is a reminder of the complicated,
contradictory history of the NRA and gun control as they relate to
Black people. Black people own guns and are the victims of gun and
white vigilante violence, and while they have used guns for
self-defense, neither the laws nor the NRA have had Black people,
their rights and their lives in mind.
“America’s
gun policies do not make sense until you consider race,” Ajenai
Clemmons, a research associate at the Samuel
DuBois Cook Center on Social Equity at Duke University, told
Atlanta Black Star. “America’s conflicted self-identity
as a democracy that promotes life, liberty, and the right to bear
arms mirrors the contradictions in a self-identified democracy based
on colonization and slavery.”
Looking
at the history of guns and Black people in America, the founding of
the nation was based on violence against people of African descent.
American gun culture is rooted in settler colonialism, the taking of
Native American land and the enslavement of African people as
memorialized in the Second Amendment, according to author Roxanne
Dunbar-Ortiz’s account in “Loaded: A Disarming
History of the Second Amendment.” The militias
institutionalized the violence against Black and indigenous peoples.
As professor Carl T. Bogus of the Roger Williams University School of
Law argues, the slave
patrols — the plantation police force in which most
Southern white men were obligated to serve — protected white
society against Black insurrection. This, in a region where Blacks
outnumbered whites and servile insurrections, were a reality. The
Second Amendment assured the slaveholding states that Congress would
not disarm their slave patrols, thereby protecting the slavery police
state.
“When
the 2nd Amendment was written, it was done so specifically for a
militia that functions both as a Confederate defense and a
Slave-owner’s offense. Despite current rhetoric, the right to
bear arms was not given to everyone everywhere at all times for all
purposes. It was granted to white citizens of a certain age that were
subject to strict regulations and oversight,” Dr. GS Potter,
founder of the Strategic
Institute of Intersectional Policy — which designs and
implements strategies to counter the political obstacles faced by the
most brutally targeted communities in the United States — told
Atlanta Black Star. She said the Second Amendment served to
consolidate white power and arm white men to protect them from the
federal government and Black people. Dr. Potter added that Black men
were specifically barred from gun ownership, with additional
restrictions through the Black Codes and Jim Crow Laws, which allowed
the former slave patrols to disarm Black Civil War veterans.
During
the civil rights movement, armed Black folks sprang up in places to
protect nonviolent protesters and Freedom Riders from Ku Klux Klan
violence and domestic terrorism. Groups such as the Deacons for
Defense and Justice and the Black
Armed Guard — which received a charter from the NRA in the
1950s — are the unsung heroes of the civil rights struggles of
the 1950s and 1960s. The Black Panther Party for Self Defense, the
pioneers of the modern-day gun rights movement and the original
proponents of open carry, faced opposition from the NRA. When the
Black nationalist group, which formed to protect their community from
police violence, invaded the California capitol building in
Sacramento in 1967, then-Governor Ronald Reagan signed the Mulford
Act in response, prohibiting open carry of guns in public places. The
following year, President Johnson signed the Gun Control Act of 1968,
which prohibited “Saturday night specials” and was
designed to target handguns and crime in communities of color.
According
to Dr. Potter, the NRA has a long history of supporting gun control
laws, advocating for a deterioration of gun rights for nonwhite
people and an expansion of gun rights for law enforcement — as
a leading proponent of the 1938 Gun Control Act, and gun control
measures amid the assassinations of President John F. Kennedy, Sen.
Robert F. Kennedy and Dr. Martin Luther King in the 1960s. “What
speaks volumes here is that in response to the murder of MLK, the NRA
chose to advocate for gun control. They did not choose to highlight
the fact that MLK had attempted to become an owner of firearms after
his home was bombed in 1956 — but he was denied,” she
said. “After being denied a firearm for self-defense in his own
home, community members began an armed watch outside of his
residence. This set the stage for the modern battle between white
rights and black rights under the Second Amendment.”
The
NRA of today is quite a different animal from what it once was. The
organization began to change in 1975, according to Dr. Potter, when
it established its Institute for Legislative Action and placed Harlon
Carter under its leadership. Carter, the man responsible for the
modern-day NRA, shot a Latino teen to death before becoming a border
agent and the first head of the U.S. Border Patrol. Under his
leadership, the NRA shifted from hunting and sportsmanship to
vigilantism, self-protection and opposition to gun control —
including a revisionist perspective on unregulated gun ownership, and
a focus on lobbying
for gun manufacturers, and donating to congressional campaigns.
“Far
from its original form, the NRA now serves as a hard-lined lobbying
firm that functions to block gun control and advance the manufacture
and distribution of weapons designed for hunting, self-defense and
military operations,” Potter said. “The radicalization of
the NRA can be seen in the same light as the radicalization of
today’s Republican Party,” she added, noting that under
Carter’s leadership, the NRA “politically weaponized
itself” and the Second Amendment to fight liberalism and people
of color, and “weaponized hypocrisy” by coining the
phrase, “Guns don’t kill people, people do.” The
NRA made its first political endorsement in 1980 when it supported
Ronald Reagan for president
Gun
ownership in America has become a political identity, and the NRA has
emerged as a part of the Republican Party coalition. This political
identity is intertwined with race and the criminalization of Black
people, creating a disaster for the African-American community. One
of the noteworthy policies the NRA has promoted are “stand
your ground” laws, which allows armed people to use deadly
force when they believe someone poses an imminent threat. White men
have invoked the laws of self-defense to justify the killing of
unarmed Black people.
Clemmons
said, “Historically, laws have deputized White citizens
relative to Native Americans, Mexican Americans, and African
Americans.The state has been an extension of the general White
population, and the general White population has been an extension of
the state. Stand Your Ground Laws continue that tradition.
Statistically, Black folks who use these laws when they feel
threatened are not afforded the same protections and liberties as
their White counterparts. They go to prison at a far higher rate. So,
when you see how the law is enforced, implicitly you know who the law
is meant for and whom the law protects.”
A
victim of America’s gun culture and vigilante violence, Jordan
Davis, was killed in 2012 by Michael Dunn, a white man, at a gas
station in Jacksonville, Florida. Dunn fired ten shots into the car
in which Jordan and his three friends were seated. His mother, Lucy
McBath, has since become active in the movement against gun violence,
as faith outreach leader of Moms
Demand Action for Gun Sense in America, and now a candidate for
the Georgia House of Representatives. “As a Black woman, I
understood we were disproportionately affected by gun violence …
and we have been dealing with this silently, and I wanted to
challenge the system where guns were used against young Black men,”
McBath told Atlanta Black Star. “How are the laws that let this
happen again and again, and why were representatives not representing
our interests? Why weren’t clergy speaking out?” she
added.
“I
know a lot of people didn’t hear about stand your ground until
Trayvon [Martin] was killed, and then Jordan. I decided we have to
talk about the NRA — profit over safety — and I wanted to
show that [not] only poor Black people die, but, no, all demographics
are suffering from this extremist culture,” McBath said,
pointing to the prevalence of gun violence in suicides among white
men, the killing of women by intimate partners, and the fact that
Black people are not committing the school mass shootings.
McBath
said the deaths of her own son and Trayvon Martin were the catalysts
that made her decide to run for office. Following the 2016 election,
she asked God for direction to expand the movement. Trump was making
his presence felt in Georgia among pro-NRA lawmakers, and even
progressives were voting for dangerous gun legislation, she noted. “I
was angry. Who was going to stand up to the legislators that are
being pandered to by the NRA?” she asked.
McBath
believes the Parkland shooting has become the catalyst for change
against an extremist gun culture and the NRA, because of those who
are demanding change — young people. “I absolutely do,
because of the demographic under assault who are children and
millennials, and they are demanding to the White House that they
protect them,” she said. “In the civil rights movement,
who were on the front lines? The college students and the high school
students. It is no different today. This is the whole demographic we
needed to stand up, because their bodies had been missing. They have
to be engaged they have to be on the front lines.
“Our
gun culture is immoral and unethical. We are no longer trusting in
God. People are placing far more trust in their gun. We are already
self-destructing,” McBath added.
It
is because of the racism in the NRA that groups such as the National
African Americans Gun Association (NAAGA) have emerged as an
alternative, to take a holistic approach to gun rights in the
African-American community. “In every way, the NRA should be
considered a terrorist organization and the military arm of the
far-right. They are organized. They are armed. They are legally and
politically protected,” Dr. Potter said. An NRA ad featuring
spokeswoman Dana Loesch captures Potter’s sentiment:
Meanwhile,
the police continue to murder Black people, and, as Dr. Potter
argues, the courts continue to support deadly force against them,
reinforcing the notion that there are laws protecting white gun
ownership and preventing Black ownership.
“These
laws are pushed and supported by the National Fraternal Order of
Police and the Republican Party — especially the most
conservative gun-toting factions. These standards, though, not only
allow for, but direct the use of force against citizens not only for
exercising their Second Amendment rights — but for giving the
perception that they are exercising their Second Amendment rights,”
she said. “In this way, Tamir Rice could be legally gunned down
for playing with a toy. In this way a caregiver for an autistic man
playing with a toy truck could be shot for posing a ‘reasonable’
threat even though no gun was present. And in the most blatant acts
of murder driven hypocrisy, Philando Castile — a teacher
legally armed with a weapon — could be shot dead on camera in
front of his fianc�e and her small child without fear of any
legal consequence whatsoever.” Potter believes that if
individual gun ownership was a nonpartisan, race-neutral proposition,
the NRA would have defended Castile.
Valerie
Castile, Philando Castile’s mother, called out NRA head Wayne
LaPierre for not standing up for her son, a so-called “good guy
with a gun” the group always touts. “If he really cared
about the good guys out here, he would have stood up for my son. It’s
about money,” Valerie Castile said of LaPierre. “He
didn’t say anything because my son was Black,” Valerie
Castile argued. “My son went through the same programs as every
gun owner. But they started nitpicking, ‘He should have done
this, he should have done that.’ The bottom line is that he
told the officer he had a weapon, and the officer became a selfish
man, only thinking about his own life and family. He chose to shoot
my son several times. One of the bullets was 16 inches from that baby
in the backseat.”
Gun
control, the NRA and Black people make for a complicated history, in
a nation where issues of race, guns, violence, money and power are
thrown in the mix.
This
commentary was originally published by AtlantaBlackStar.com
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