Forward:
In the article below we see reference once again to the tired label of "racist" being (over) used against the 2A by the ACLU. The Second Amendment of course does not ascribe any differentiation over rights with regard to race or creed.
It's hard to tell if the caption is accurate with the image being used, but then in particular we see an 'oops', putting the gun in or taking it out - what is immediately obvious is finger on trigger plus, support hand almost aligned with muzzle. This shows stupidity, danger, lack of training, and seemingly an ignorant photo editor. Appropriate perhaps for a tale about ACLU.

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Debunking the ACLU’s
Racist Anti-Gun Narrative
Black Guns Matter founder dismisses ACLU's anti-gun rhetoric

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Woman puts a licensed handgun in her purse (Sorapop Udomsri/Shutterstock)

By Isaac Willour. August 4, 2021
Article Source

(Article Available as Audio, 5 min)

 

The ACLU has decided to pull the race card in its latest anti-gun narrative, but Second Amendment advocates aren’t buying it.

The ACLU’s new theory about the Second Amendment is that it’s “anti-black.” Carol Anderson, professor of African American Studies at Emory University and author of the book White Rage: The Unspoken Truth of Our Nation’s Divide, recently appeared on the ACLU’s At Liberty podcast and claimed that the Second Amendment’s creation was deeply racial in nature and fundamentally rooted in “anti-blackness.”

Anderson uses slavery, police brutality, and the 1967 Mulford Act to make her case that the Second Amendment is a tool to oppress black Americans. This culminated in her assertion that the Second Amendment is fundamentally, irredeemably “anti-black.”

This anti-gun sentiment is nothing new for the ACLU. Sentiments like Anderson’s perfectly fit its current narrative on gun control. The ACLU openly supports anti-Second Amendment legislation, claiming that “[t]he solution to gun violence is not more guns, but less.” Examples of these “solutions” include bans on assault weapons and raising the minimum age to purchase a handgun. According to the ACLU, such restrictions supposedly “raise no civil liberties concerns.”

This anti-gun narrative and its subsequent policy prescriptions are full of holes, but Anderson’s assertion about anti-blackness is completely repudiated by legal scholars and historians. Eugene Volokh, professor of law at the University of California, Los Angeles told The American Spectator that the Second Amendment’s roots in English law have “nothing to do with black/white relations.” He also pointed to the history of the Second Amendment, noting that much of the impetus behind it was rooted in northern states. “Black/white relations were far less central in those states than they were in the South,” said Volokh. Anderson’s narrative about the fundamentally racial nature of the Second Amendment never mentioned this legal background.

Legal historian and George Washington University professor Robert Cottrol also pushed back on Anderson’s theory of the Second Amendment’s racist roots. He referenced the amendment’s roots in England as well: “Were the English in 1689 thinking of anti-Blackness?” Cottrol noted that the right to keep and bear arms was never primarily an issue of race, but of freedom — a “counterpoint to a tyrannical government.”

Cottrol also noted the connection between the Second and the Fourteenth Amendment, “a product of the anti-slavery movement.” Its enumerated right to self-preservation is a critical problem for Anderson’s narrative of anti-blackness. Cottrol maintained sharp criticism of the ACLU’s “opportunistic” narrative on gun ownership and Anderson’s historical perspective:“this theory is totally wrong.”

With Anderson’s theories as to the legal history of the Second Amendment now highly dubious, the ACLU’s anti-gun narrative was next. The ACLU’s current idea of gun control under the guise of helping black Americans is also disputed by figures like Second Amendment advocate Maj Toure, who founded the nonprofit Black Guns Matter in 2016 to educate urban communities about the Second Amendment and responsible firearm use. Toure told The American Spectator that the Second Amendment’s supposed anti-blackness has “no historical basis.”

The firearms advocate said that current pushes for gun control are far more anti-black than the right to keep and bear arms: “How coincidentally, after millions of black people buy guns and train, you have one of the most archaic and racist gun control attempts at the federal level.” Toure pointed to “anti-gun zealot” David Chipman, Biden’s nominee for director of the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, and Firearms, as an example of the administration’s commitment to limit gun rights.

Despite this trend from both the ACLU and the Biden administration, Toure isn’t worried about the effects of the latest anti-gun narrative: “We fight those talking points with right knowledge.” Pointing to the success of Black Guns Matter, Toure maintains that pro-gun sentiment in America is growing. “It’s continuing, it’s getting more fervent,” says Toure.

This fervency means that more and more Americans are discarding the anti-gun narratives coming from Carol Anderson and the ACLU, and the numbers show it. A May 2021 Pew Research poll found that the number of Americans in support of stricter gun laws (53 percent) has decreased from 2019 (60 percent). This shift has been bipartisan — according to a November 2020 Gallup poll, American support for stricter gun control has hit 57 percent, its lowest level since 2016. Overall support for measures like handgun bans also sits at 25 percent, a near-record low. Americans are not buying anti-gun narratives, and their numbers are increasing.

Along with growing public sentiment, Second Amendment advocates are seeing wins on the legal front. The ACLU’s stance on handgun ownership was rebutted by the Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals in Hirschfeld v. ATF. The decision struck down a 1968 federal law that bans licensed firearms dealers from selling handguns to adults under age 21. The Fourth Circuit’s 2-1 decision put the court at odds with the Fifth Circuit’s 2012 decision to uphold the handgun sales ban, leading legal experts to anticipate a showdown at the Supreme Court.

As gun rights see growing support, both from the legal side and on the ground from organizations like Black Guns Matter, the narrative side of the argument remains critical. Activists like Toure don’t shy away from standing up to the anti-gun narrative. “We don’t ignore it,” says Toure. “We call them out for their statements being incorrect.”

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