Gun Control & RKBA
Related: About this forumGuardian: Armed black citizens escort Michigan lawmaker to capitol after volatile rightwing protest
Repost from LBN: https://www.democraticunderground.com/10142489270
The state representative Sarah Anthony, 36, said she wanted to highlight what she saw as the failure of the Michigan capitol police to provide legislators with adequate security during the protest, which saw demonstrators with rifles standing in the legislative chamber above lawmakers...
...One of Anthonys constituents, a black firefighter, organized Wednesdays capitol escort. While early reports focused on three black men with large rifles escorting Anthony, there were six participants, including two women, and some of them were armed with handguns, Lynn said. Five of the participants are black and one is Hispanic. Michael Lynn Jr, a Lansing resident, said he was frustrated to see his legislator being violently intimidated in her workplace. He said the escort was the first time he had ever chosen to openly carry his AR-15 rifle.
Lynn said he did not want to see a black woman who had been elevated to political office feeling threatened because of the white supremacists in the yard and wanted to make sure that would never happen again...
Read more: https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2020/may/07/michigan-lawmaker-armed-escort-rightwing-protest
Now, *that's* more like it!
The Deacons for Defense and Justice set the original example:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deacons_for_Defense_and_Justice
https://www.democraticunderground.com/discuss/duboard.php?azview_all&address118x331645
Remembering Robert Hicks and the Deacons of Defense
https://www.nytimes.com/2010/04/25/us/25hicks.html?_r1&scp1&sqrobert%20hicks&stcse
By Douglas Martin
April 24, 2010
Someone had called to say the Ku Klux Klan was coming to bomb Robert Hicks's house. The police said there was nothing they could do. It was the night of Feb. 1, 1965, in Bogalusa, La.
The Klan was furious that Mr. Hicks, a black paper mill worker, was putting up two white civil rights workers in his home. It was just six months after three young civil rights workers had been murdered in Philadelphia, Miss.
Mr. Hicks and his wife, Valeria, made some phone calls. They found neighbors to take in their children, and they reached out to friends for protection. Soon, armed black men materialized. Nothing happened.
Less than three weeks later, the leaders of a secretive, paramilitary organization of blacks called the Deacons for Defense and Justice visited Bogalusa. It had been formed in Jonesboro, La., in 1964 mainly to protect unarmed civil rights demonstrators from the Klan. After listening to the Deacons, Mr. Hicks took the lead in forming a Bogalusa chapter, recruiting many of the men who had gone to his house to protect his family and guests...
The RW will not disarm, and as we've seen, the police will not disarm them.
Kudos to these citizens for following in the path of the Deacons and protecting their rights
LizBeth
(10,936 posts)being hunted down and murdered. I think this is strong, and relevant.
thucythucy
(8,808 posts)seem in much better shape physically than the couch warriors we saw days ago.
Just something that struck me comparing the two images.
Jake Stern
(3,146 posts)The African Americans were permitted to open carry like the White protestors were without being bothered.
discntnt_irny_srcsm
(18,603 posts)It was Thoreau, a proponent of non-violent protest, whose speech, A Plea for Captain John Brown, proved persuasive in the case where the abolitionist movement grudgingly came to accept John Brown as a martyr. Captain Brown's raid and plan to mount an insurrection at Harpers Ferry Armory led to several deaths and many injuries.
At some point after this Gandhi wrote, "It is better to be violent, if there is violence in our hearts, than to put on the cloak of non-violence to cover impotence. Violence is any day preferable to impotence. There is hope for a violent man to become non-violent. There is no such hope for the impotent."
Kudos indeed: