Five myths about the National Rifle Association
Never is the Second Amendment more important than during public unrest, a National Rifle Association video claimed in March. Rhetoric about owning, wielding and using guns has grown especially heated in recent weeks. In response to protests against police brutality, President Trump tweeted, when the looting starts, the shooting starts, echoing a Miami police chief from the 1960s and an NRA article published after the Los Angeles riots in 1992. You loot we shoot, wrote Marion Hammer, the organizations first female president. Meanwhile, armed protests against state health measures, such as those that shut down the Michigan Legislature last month, seem rooted in an ideology promoted by the modern NRA: that only firearms in civilian hands can safeguard the nation from government overreach. Here are five myths about the groups mission and history some told by critics, others told by the NRA itself.
Myth No. 1
The early NRA was involved with the Ku Klux Klan.
Michael Moore, in his 2002 documentary Bowling for Columbine, insinuated that the NRA and the KKK were linked, because they were formed six years apart. The New Republic drew a similar connection in a 2013 article on the history of gun control. In a recent review of my book (which reported no ties between the organizations), the New York Times wrote that the NRA came to the rescue of Southern members of the K.K.K., before issuing a correction.
Documents from the era, including an exhaustive tome by NRA co-founder William Conant Church, show that this isnt true. The early NRA, founded at the peak of Reconstruction in 1871, never went much farther than its shooting range outside Manhattan, and played no role in the South during Reconstruction or for years thereafter. Church and other early NRA leaders, nearly all of whom were veteran Union officers, unequivocally supported President Ulysses S. Grants efforts to crush the Klan.
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Myth No. 2
The NRA originated as a champion of gun rights.
The group calls itself Americas longest-standing civil rights organization, a claim constantly repeated by its leaders and lawyers, and by media outlets including NPR.
But the NRA did not raise gun rights at all over the first half-century of its existence. It focused instead on improving marksmanship in anticipation of future wars. In 1922, an editorial in the NRAs first official journal flagged gun rights as an area of concern for the first time, citing both a 1911 New York law and Russias recent outlawing of civilian ownership of guns. The Second Amendment came up only as the Cold War set in: The NRA first asserted what it called the Second Article of the Bill of Rights, along with the the right of the people to keep and bear arms, in a 1952 American Rifleman editorial.
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https://www.washingtonpost.com/outlook/five-myths/five-myths-about-the-national-rifle-association/2020/06/05/fa3bc488-a66c-11ea-bb20-ebf0921f3bbd_story.html
Amy-Strange
(854 posts)Thomas Hurt
(13,903 posts)for the former slaves to protect them from Jim Crow. Not sure I buy that either.