Gun Activists Create Atmosphere that Fosters Political Violence

By Dennis Henigan

The rage from the right directed at the Obama Administration, and particularly the health care reform legislation, has long been ugly. It’s now becoming poisonous, and dangerous. Threats of violence have been made against Congressional supporters of health care reform, most recently Washington State Senator Patty Murray. Bricks have been thrown through the windows of local Democratic Party headquarters from New York to Kansas to Arizona. We are seeing a resurgence of rightwing militia groups training for war against the government.

It is too easy for politicians and political commentators to treat our increasingly incendiary political atmosphere as a product merely of disparate extremist individuals and groups on the fringes of our political system. Treating the problem as the product of a relatively few misguided individuals with bizarre violent fantasies misses a far more troubling reality. What we are seeing is the acting out of an ideology of violence as a tool of political power that has long had a home on the American right – particularly in the “gun rights” movement dominated by the National Rifle Association.

The central theme of that ideology is that the importance of the “right of the people to keep and bear arms” in the Second Amendment is not limited to private self-defense or hunting, but far more importantly includes the potential for an armed citizenry to resist the government. According to this view, the Second Amendment deters government overreaching by creating an ever-present threat of violent resistance. Some years ago, an NRA official put it this way, “the Second Amendment . . . is literally a loaded gun in the hands of the people held to the heads of government.”

Echoes of the NRA’s insurrectionist rhetoric can be heard from the leaders of the gun activists who plan to converge on Washington, D.C. on April 19, a date with great emotional resonance for the “gun rights” movement and, for different reasons, for the rest of us. It is both the anniversary of Lexington/Concord and of the tragic federal assault on the David Koresh compound in Waco, Texas in 1993. It also is the anniversary of what was, to that date, the worst terrorist attack in U.S. history – Timothy McVeigh’s 1995 bombing of the Murrah Federal Building in Oklahoma City. McVeigh, as we know now, saw himself as the embodiment of the Second Amendment right to use violence against government overreaching – for him, the Waco tragedy was evidence of government “tyranny” sufficient to justify insurrection. Consider now the words of Skip Coryell, the founder of the Second Amendment March set for April 19 in the Nation’s Capital, as he justifies threats of armed force against elected officials:

“We the people have been exercising our First Amendment right to the hilt. We’re screaming! We’re protesting! We’re faxing! We’re phoning and marching and yelling….But still…they ignore us….There are a lot of people out there like me who will no longer tolerate the arrogance of politicians who ignore us….And here’s the million-dollar question: What happens if the First Amendment fails?…When the government ignores the First Amendment, it is time to rattle the Second Amendment sabers…As long as our elected officials believe we will rise up and overthrow them under certain conditions, then they will not allow those conditions to occur. Their jobs and their very lives depend on it.”

In other words, if we use the First Amendment to try to persuade our elected officials to our point of view, and we fail, then it’s time to resort to the Second Amendment – that is, to threaten violence. And, ultimately, to use violence.

This is right out of the NRA’s playbook. Last year, NRA Executive Director Wayne LaPierre explained it in chilling terms to the wild cheers of the Conservative Political Action Conference. According to LaPierre, when it comes down to it, the only freedom that really counts is the right to be armed – without it, “liberty is but an illusion.” In the NRA’s world, we are only free to the extent that our guns allow us to impose our will on others. Here are LaPierre’s words:

“Our divine rights, they might have been endowed by a Creator, but they are preserved by mortals, if we mortals have the means and the will to make it stick….Freedom is nothing but dust in the wind till it’s guarded by the blue steel and dry powder of a free and armed people….Our founding fathers understood that the guys with the guns make the rules.”

It is worth pausing to reflect on that phrase: “The guys with the guns make the rules.” In the NRA’s distortion of democracy, the rules we live by are not ultimately the result of our collective decision-making, made through our elected representatives, after we have had a fair opportunity to exercise our First Amendment right to be heard. Ultimately, the rules are made by those who are more powerful than the rest of us because they are armed.

With manufactured outrage, the NRA will deny that it condones violence or that it is “responsible” for the violent acts of others. What it cannot deny is that has long been the most powerful purveyor of an ideology that legitimizes violence, and the threat of violence, as a tool of political power. And, after Oklahoma City, none of us can hide from the foreseeable, and perhaps inevitable, consequences of that ideology.

moby clarke's picture

You never respond to any of the comments. I wonder why. Actually, I know why. You, and I can't use the word "sir" because you are not, are a coward. You want someone else, specifically, the government , to do everything for you. You don't trust yourself to make the right decisions. You fear everything and everyone and want other to feel those same, shameful feelings.

Good luck to you, you are going to need it.

Nivarion's picture

In summary.

'The people of the US are pissed off because the government is taking away rights, talking about legislating away others and ignoring the constitution . They are near violence and well armed.

We suggest for solution, forcibly taking away their arms, to make them a non- threat .'

Yeah, because trying to take away a weapon from someone who is totally pissed at you for taking his rights is going to be a safe operation. If you actually WANT to start a rebellion that's what you're going to do. It will be the last straw, guaranteed.

If you don't want the people of the US to water the tree of freedom with your blood, best do what they want instead of what you want.

m46607's picture

I'm tired of this bitter rhetoric from the Left, pegging and construing anyone who disagrees with the Administration's actions as violent rednecks. In reality this whole fiasco began when Congress decided it doesn't give a damn about democracy or the republic.

Come November the only violence they'll see is a boot from office.

Dannytheman's picture

What a bigot you have become. To pick on me individually and suggest that I am Politically Violent? Do you think every Muslim wants to kill everybody on the planet of other religious beliefs?
Websters defines Bigot as :
a person obstinately or intolerantly devoted to his or her own opinions and prejudices; especially : one who regards or treats the members of a group with hatred and intolerance.

You sir are a bigot.

How dare you compare me to criminals and wackos on the right, or the left. I am a simple law abiding person enjoying the freedoms given to me by the constitution . You wish to impose on my freedom and you use out right bigotry .

Shameful of you!
I am the NRA!

BrianJUY's picture

Dennis... Do you propose we get rid of the right to bear arms? The right of the people peaceably to assemble? Or both?

The NRA is not the voice of everyone who believes in the right to bear arms. They are not all scary gun nuts either. Most members of the NRA are normal law abiding people just like you and me... We'll, maybe not as pussy-footed at you.

Yes there are extremist everywhere in every group, but the voice and actions of extremist shouldn't carry weight .

Blaming a certain group of people for the actions of a few is complete bigotry .

It's like saying all Muslims are terrorist who participate in suicide bombings and honor killings; when in fact it's a very peaceful religion and most Muslims look down upon the extremist.

On another note:

I'm a former Marine... I love the U.S.

That being said; if the U.S. government got out of control, I would absolutely stand behind the people of the U.S. to take the country back. So would a large amount of our military forces. When our military is sworn in we are sworn to protect our country from all enemies both foreign and domestic.

Too many U.S. Americans have forgot the past... Our country was in a bloody civil war which turned brother against brother. It not only divided our country, it divided our government too. We're not immune to another civil war. Anyone who believes we are is ignorant.

If a tipping point is reached; civil war will happen. We just need to hope we don't reach it. If that point was reached, I know I will exercise my right to bear arms to defend my family , myself and my country.

Final Note:

Since you wrote about it and talked around it, here's the 2nd amendment as it's written... Since you neglected to put it in your article.

Amendment II

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.

m46607's picture

Your service in the armed forces is appreciated.

Some folks are more hell-bent on not offending minorities and fringe groups unless those being offended happen to be Americans . It's unfortunate that people like you defend this country so that others may spit on the road you've paved.

BrianJUY's picture

You are welcome.

When i was in the Marines there was only 1 color... Green... All Marines are green , some are light green... some are dark green... But we were all green non-the-less.

There was only 1 nationality... U.S. American... We weren't Irish American Marines, African American Marines, Mexican American Marines... Just U.S. American Marines.

I feel the P.C. that plagues the U.S. is a plague and the U.S. government is slowly taking our rights away using P.C. as justification.

If the government oversteps their boundaries... A beauty of the U.S. is that we have the right to bear arms and to protect our way of life.

It's okay if others spit on that road... Another beauty about the U.S. is... that's their right. If someone wants to bash the U.S., spit on the constitution and burn a flag, they can without worrying about being thrown in prison or shot in the head.

Our paths are all paved with the stones that scarred our feet.

m46607's picture

One of my co- workers was in the USMC Reserves, activated during the invasion of Iraq. His unit had custom t-shirts made, reading the following: "Hicks, Spicks, Gooks, Spooks, and a Kike."

While there's nothing politically correct about it none of the skin colors or lineages mattered. His response was "we're all brothers." We can't lead our lives being offended by and combating every single word that a person writes or speaks. Otherwise we'll end up tired, miserable people.

BrianJUY's picture

LOL... I still have a couple of my unit t-shirts... We all had nicknames...

I could run fast so my nickname was Speedie... and they all joked around that all white guys were on speed, that's why I could run fast...

Our one buddy drove old beat up Cadillacs he'd buy for $300-400... He'd drive them until they died and he'd get a new one... and he was Cadillac, he happened to be black...

Our one buddy had just got his U.S. citizenship , he was a Mexican immigrant... Right after he was sworn in we got pulled for duty to work with the Border Patrol (now known as ICE)... We had some fun with that... His nickname was La Migra... and he hated illegal immigrants more than any redneck...

The Jewish guy was nicknamed Money, because his parents hated the fact that he joined the Marines and didn't go to college ... But they'd send him some awesome care packeges and cash (more than 2 of our paychecks combined), so we'd buy booze with his parent's money ...

Your co-worker is right on... There's no room for racism in a fox hole... Or anywhere else in my opinion...

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