• The Second Amendment Was About Controlling Our Slaves In The Good Old D

    From Waldo Johnson@21:1/5 to All on Mon Feb 19 22:52:53 2024
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    XPost: talk.politics.guns, alt.atheism

    Historian Uncovers The Racist Roots Of The 2nd Amendment

    Do Black people have full Second Amendment rights?

    That's the question historian Carol Anderson set out to answer after
    Minnesota police killed Philando Castile, a Black man with a license to
    carry a gun, during a 2016 traffic stop.

    "Here was a Black man who was pulled over by the police, and the police
    officer asked to see his identification. Philando Castile, using the NRA guidelines, alerts to the officer that he has a licensed weapon with
    him," she says. "[And] the police officer began shooting."

    In the 1990s, after the assault on the Branch Davidian compound in Waco,
    Texas, the National Rifle Association condemned federal authorities as "jackbooted government thugs." But Anderson says the organization "went virtually silent" when it came to Castile's case, issuing a tepid
    statement that did not mention Castile by name.

    In her new book, The Second: Race and Guns in a Fatally Unequal America, Anderson traces racial distinctions in Americans' treatment of gun
    ownership back to the founding of the country and the Second Amendment,
    which states:

    "A well regulated Militia, being necessary to the security of a free
    State, the right of the people to keep and bear Arms, shall not be
    infringed."

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    The language of the amendment, Anderson says, was crafted to ensure that
    slave owners could quickly crush any rebellion or resistance from those
    whom they'd enslaved. And she says the right to bear arms, presumably guaranteed to all citizens, has been repeatedly denied to Black people.
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    "One of the things that I argue throughout this book is that it is just
    being Black that is the threat. And so when you mix that being Black as
    the threat with bearing arms, it's an exponential fear," she says. "This
    isn't an anti-gun or a pro-gun book. This is a book about African
    Americans' rights."
    Interview Highlights
    The Second: Race and Guns in a Fatally Unequal America, by Carol Anderson Bloomsbury Publishing

    On the crafting of the Second Amendment at the Constitutional Convention

    It was in response to the concerns coming out of the Virginia ratification convention for the Constitution, led by Patrick Henry and George Mason,
    that a militia that was controlled solely by the federal government would
    not be there to protect the slave owners from an enslaved uprising. And
    ... James Madison crafted that language in order to mollify the concerns
    coming out of Virginia and the anti-Federalists, that they would still
    have full control over their state militias — and those militias were used
    in order to quell slave revolts. ... The Second Amendment really provided
    the cover, the assurances that Patrick Henry and George Mason needed, that
    the militias would not be controlled by the federal government, but that
    they would be controlled by the states and at the beck and call of the
    states to be able to put down these uprisings.
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    On Black people's access to arms after the American Revolution

    You saw incredible restrictions being put in place about limiting access
    to arms. And this is across the board for free Blacks and, particularly,
    for the enslaved. And with each uprising, the laws became even more
    strict, even more definitive, about who could and who could not bear arms.
    And so free Blacks were particularly proscribed. And so we see this, for instance, in Georgia, where Georgia had a law that restricted the carrying
    of guns.

    On the Founding Fathers' fear of a slave revolt, which was stoked by the Haitian Revolution

    When Haiti began to overthrow the French colonial masters and were seizing
    that country for themselves, when Blacks were seizing that country for themselves, the violence of the Haitian Revolution, the existence of the Haitian Revolution, just sent basically an earthquake of fear throughout
    the United States. You had George Washington lamenting the violence. You
    had Thomas Jefferson talking about [how] he was fearful that those ideas
    over there, if they get here, it's going to be fire. You had James Madison worried. ...


    Whites ... were fleeing Haiti and were bringing their enslaved populations
    with them, their enslaved people with them. ... [There was a fear that]
    the ideas that these Black Haitians would have, that somehow those ideas
    of revolution, those ideas of racial justice, those ideas of freedom and democracy would just metastasize throughout Virginia's Black enslaved population and cause a revolt. You had that same fear coming out of
    Baltimore that then began to open up the public armory to whites, saying,
    "You are justified in being armed because they're bringing too many of
    these Black Haitians, these enslaved Haitians, up here who have these
    ideas that Black people can be free."

    On how the Black Panthers responded to restrictions on Black people's
    ability to bear arms in the 1960s


    What the Black Panthers were dealing with was massive police brutality.
    Just beating on Black people, killing Black people at will with impunity.
    And the Panthers decided that they would police the police. Huey P.
    Newton, who was the co-founder of the Black Panthers along with Bobby
    Seale, ... knew the law, and he knew what the law said about being able to open-carry weapons and the types of weapons you were able to openly carry
    and how far you had to stand away from the police arresting somebody or interrogating somebody. ... And the police did not like having these
    aggressive Black men and women doing that work of policing the police. And
    the response was a thing called the Mulford Act, and the Mulford Act set
    out to ban open carrying of weapons. And it was drafted by a conservative assemblyman in California with the support and help of an NRA
    representative and eagerly signed by Gov. Ronald Reagan as a way to make illegal what the Panthers were legally doing.

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