Blacks and Guns

Posted by Jack Lee

Unfortunately and wrongly, the stereotype is, a black man with a gun is always shown committing a crime. However, if there was ever a group within America that has earned the right to keep and bear arms it is our black Americans. The 2nd Amendment is for all citizens, and for good reasons. Please read on.

“One of the earliest scenes of the Autobiography of Malcolm X takes us to the Lansing, Mich., of 1929. Malcolm’s father, Earl Little, a Baptist minister derided as “uppity” for aspiring to own a store and live outside the city’s traditional black neighborhoods, shot a pistol one night at a pair of white men who’d apparently set the family’s home ablaze. In the following weeks, the police regularly searched the new Little residence, “looking for a gun.” The pistol, which officials refused to issue the minister a permit to legally carry, was eventually sewn into a pillow.

The scene is a powerful reminder of why for much of American history, it was necessary for blacks to fight for the right to bear arms, often to protect our very existence.

A little more than a week ago I suggested that the Martin case should open a meaningful debate about the future of gun policy. The most striking responses to that column boiled down to this: History binds blacks to the gun-rights movement. “Remember your history,” one reader wrote me. So I started reading the history.

It’s easy to forget that the 17th-century French slave code, Le Code Noir, explicitly prohibited colonial slaves from bearing weapons — except with their master’s permission to hunt on plantation grounds. Later, in 1776, the Founding Fathers clearly did not view blacks as citizens to be given the Constitution’s Second Amendment rights.

An important reminder on this comes — astonishingly — from Clarence Thomas, the Supreme Court justice. In his 2010 McDonald v. Chicago (pdf) opinion, Thomas notes that pre-Civil War lawmakers, particularly in the South, used highly restrictive gun laws to control freed blacks, slaves and certain whites. “It is difficult to overstate the extent to which fear of a slave uprising gripped slaveholders and dictated the acts of Southern legislatures,” he wrote.

The conservative jurist, who was raised in the segregated South, points to two key Reconstruction-era cases. First, there’s the 1873 Colfax Massacre in Louisiana, in which white militias killed dozens of blacks to maintain control of a courthouse in the wake of a contested election in which African Americans displayed new authority. One view held that the states would defend all the rights of all residents to bear arms — including blacks granted full citizenship by the 14th Amendment, in 1868. This, of course, did not happen.

Thomas also reminds us of the Hamburg Massacre in South Carolina, in which a white militia murdered a group of blacks simply because they’d held a Fourth of July parade. “The use of firearms for self-defense,” Thomas wrote, “was often the only way black citizens could protect themselves from mob violence.”

END

The examples of blacks legally owning firearms to protect themselves are endless, black criminals using illegal firearms unfortunately obscure this fact and distorts the picture of black America and their long and responsible history with firearms. I would hate to see them (or any of us) lose any ground now because of well meaning liberals who want to restrict gun rights thinking they are helping.

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4 Responses to Blacks and Guns

  1. Chris says:

    Great article, Jack. Although I’m curious as to who wrote it; maybe I’m just missing something, but I don’t see it attributed to anyone.

  2. Post Scripts says:

    Chris, I know, that’s a bummer. I was trying to find the name of the author and I couldn’t. Sorry, if I had it I would be happy to let you know.

  3. Tina says:

    The Author is Steven Gray writing at “The Root” website:

    http://www.theroot.com/views/guns-and-blacks

    “The examples of blacks legally owning firearms to protect themselves are endless…”

    Not only themselves but this nation! This is America. those of us that love her because “all men are created equal” and because we respect “the rule of law” need to stand together against the elements that would seek to divide us.

  4. Post Scripts says:

    Ah thank you Tina… and that was a very nice addition you put in, you are so right!

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