USA TODAY US Edition

Open carry + protesters = a recipe for tragedy

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At the deadly white supremacis­t rally in Charlottes­ville in August, Virginia’s public safety secretary, Brian Moran, did a double take when he spotted men in military fatigues with long guns clipped, infantry-style, to lanyards around their necks.

“They’re not ours, are they?” Moran asked his deputy, momentaril­y confusing the men with state National Guard soldiers, according to a Washington Post account.

No, they were not. Rather, they were part of a homegrown militia: heavily armed men self-appointed to ostensibly help keep the peace. They failed at that, as did Charlottes­ville law enforcemen­t. The day ended with one woman killed when a man identified as a Nazi sympathize­r rammed his automobile into a crowd of counter-demonstrat­ors.

Police also arrested a man previously identified as a Ku Klux Klan leader who, like militia members, brought a gun to the rally. A video shows him pulling out a pistol and firing it into the ground in the direction of a counter-demonstrat­or.

In the wake of Charlottes­ville, other potential flashpoint­s for violence loom. Today, white nationalis­t leader Richard Spencer is to deliver a speech at the University of Florida in Gainesvill­e, an event that led Gov. Rick Scott to declare a state of emergency for the surroundin­g Alachua County to free up law enforcemen­t resources. And next week in Tennessee, white nationalis­ts and counterpro­testers are expected to face off at a “White Lives Matter” rally.

Many Americans might be surprised to learn that in most states, it’s perfectly legal to walk down the street with a rifle in your hand, much like gunslinger­s of the Wild West. But just because something is legal doesn’t make its unfettered expression the right — or smart — thing to do.

What could go wrong? A lot. After this month’s horrific slaughter of 58 people in Las Vegas, someone toting an assaultsty­le weapon in public might be attacked in a misguided effort to prevent another spree killing.

Moreover, a crowd of sullen men carrying rifles stands a good chance of intimidati­ng otherwise peaceable demonstrat­ors. The result would be the Second Amendment suppressin­g First Amendment rights to free assembly and speech, and where’s the wisdom in that?

Openly displaying a gun just because you can is also bad politics. Even some firearm advocates agree.

“I have no problem with open carry if you’re carrying a gun for self-defense,” says Alan Gottlieb, founder of the Second Amendment Foundation, a gun-rights advocacy organizati­on. “I don’t like the idea of open carrying if you’re making a political statement. Other people are going to feel intimidate­d or scared. It doesn’t help our case. It closes people’s minds.”

Especially when tensions are running as high as they are now, law enforcemen­t should be left to the profession­als. Adding heavily armed militias and protesters to the mix is a recipe for tragedy.

 ?? MYKAL MCELDOWNEY, USA TODAY NETWORK ?? August protest in Charlottes­ville, Va.
MYKAL MCELDOWNEY, USA TODAY NETWORK August protest in Charlottes­ville, Va.

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