Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

After Orlando, LGBT group embraces guns

Most in community responded with calls for more gun control

- By HAILEY BRANSON-POTTS

LOS ANGELES — Jonathan Fischer is never sure who’s going to be more surprised when he, as he likes to put it, comes out of the gun closet — the gun aficionado­s who find out he is gay or the gay friends who find out he likes shooting guns.

When the 38-year-old television editor showed up last month to a defensive handgun class near Piru with a Glock 27 pistol on his hip, he wore a T-shirt sporting a rainbow-colored AK-47. His “gay-K-47,” he said.

In the days after 49 people were fatally shot at the Pulse gay nightclub in Orlando, Florida, this summer, Fischer wanted to do something to make his community safer. So he started the West Hollywood chapter of the Pink Pistols — a loosely organized, national LGBT gun group.

“If someone was to try and break into my home, and especially if someone were armed, I don’t want to fight back with a kitchen knife,” Fischer said. “And I don’t think that’s extremist or crazy.”

It’s a contrast to how the majority of LGBT activists and organizati­ons responded to the Orlando massacre, which has sparked calls within the community for gun control.

In the wake of the shooting, some gay bars like the Abbey in West Hollywood beefed up security. The same day as the Orlando mass shooting, L.A.’s annual gay pride parade was rattled after a heavily armed man en route to the event was arrested.

For all the anxiety Orlando has caused, many gay activists say becoming armed is not the answer.

“Some people say you need a gun to protect yourself from the bad guys. We just fundamenta­lly disagree with that,” said Rick Zbur, executive director of Equality California. “We don’t want to live in a world where you have to be packing heat to live your daily life.”

But for a small subset of the community, Orlando has become a call to arms.

When the firearms instructor at the range near Piru asked each person in the class why he or she was there, Fischer ticked off several reasons and mentioned the Pink Pistols.

“What is the Pink Pistols group?” a man asked. There was a pause. “We’re — a gay gun group,” Fischer said hesitantly. He tried quickly to explain.

“No, that’s awesome,” the man said.

Interest in the Pink Pistols has increased since the Orlando attack, with new chapters springing up across the country, including the West Hollywood chapter and another one in North Hollywood. There was such an outpouring of support from firearms trainers that the Pink Pistols’ website now has a map listing LGBT-friendly firearms instructor­s in every state.

Gwendolyn Patton, the national spokeswoma­n for the Pink Pistols, has spent the summer trying to keep up with the all inquiries about the group and how to start new chapters.

“People don’t like to feel helpless,” said Patton, a lesbian who lives outside Philadelph­ia.

The Pink Pistols has received a mostly negative response from the broader LGBT community, she said. Some LGBT centers, she said, have specifical­ly banned the Pink Pistols from using their facilities.

The group dates to 2000 when gay author and journalist Jonathan Rauch wrote an article for Salon. com calling for gay people to “set up Pink Pistols task forces, get licensed to carry guns and arm themselves to protect their community.”

“Not all that many gay people would need to carry guns, as long as gay-bashers couldn’t tell which ones did,” Rauch wrote.

The first Pink Pistols chapter, taking its name directly from Rauch’s article, was started in Boston just after its publicatio­n, Patton said. Today, there are 50 chapters in the United States and Canada.

The Pink Pistols and LGBT groups that have pushed for more gun control cite violence against LGBT people as a reason for their disparate views.

A fifth of the 5,462 single-bias hate crimes reported to the FBI in 2014, the most recent year for which data are available, were because of the victim’s sexual orientatio­n or identity as a transgende­r or gender non-conforming person. That was higher than the number of religiousl­y motivated hate crimes and surpassed only by racially motivated hate crimes.

Since the Pulse shootings, more than 100 LGBT groups have signed a pledge backing gun control legislatio­n. The Los Angeles LGBT Center now includes gun safety in weekly policy discussion­s. And a growing new group called Gays Against Guns has staged protests across the country.

At last month’s defensive handgun class near Piru, the instructor, Jeffrey Bova, a truck driver, said he reached out to the West Hollywood Pink Pistols, offering to teach them himself.

During the class, on a triple-digit day, Bova stood next to Pink Pistols member Elizabeth Southern, trying to get her comfortabl­e with the gun as she practiced drawing it from a holster on her hip. Her back rigid, her shoulders tense, she pulled out the model 1911 pistol and fired, striking a steel plate in the distance.

“I’m not used to it being loaded and on me,” she said.

“I get it, I get it!” Bova said. “Who walks around with a loaded gun in the holster? … Relax.”

Southern was shooting only for the second time. The 25-year-old Downey resident is bisexual, African-American and a woman — and likely to experience discrimina­tion because of all three factors, she said.

Southern joined the Pink Pistols this summer because she was a recent victim of domestic violence and had to get a restrainin­g order against a former boyfriend who threatened to kill her and her son. She attended the West Hollywood Pink Pistols’ first group shooting event in Sylmar in July. The first time she pulled the trigger, she broke down crying.

“It was the first moment in my life that I felt like I wouldn’t have to live in fear anymore, that I’d be able to protect myself and my family,” Southern said.

Last month, she bought her first gun.

 ?? LUIS SINCO/LOS ANGELES TIMES/TNS ?? Television editor Jonathan Fischer, 38, trains with a firearm at the ISI gun range in Piru, Calif. “If someone was to try and break into my home, and especially if someone were armed, I don’t want to fight back with a kitchen knife,” he says.
LUIS SINCO/LOS ANGELES TIMES/TNS Television editor Jonathan Fischer, 38, trains with a firearm at the ISI gun range in Piru, Calif. “If someone was to try and break into my home, and especially if someone were armed, I don’t want to fight back with a kitchen knife,” he says.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States