Baltimore Sun

NBA star exercises his Tennessee right to be armed, dangerous fool

- By Francis Wilkinson

What did Ja Morant do wrong?

The 23-year-old NBA superstar faced a barrage of criticism after he was seen in an Instagram Live this month waving a handgun while bopping to music in a car. This was Morant’s second public escapade with a firearm. He was suspended from his team, the Memphis Grizzlies, in March after a thematical­ly similar video surfaced of Morant in a Denver nightclub.

NBA Commission­er Adam Silver said in March that Morant’s behavior was “irresponsi­ble, reckless and potentiall­y dangerous.”

Silver was dismayed by this month’s video, too, commenting that Morant “could have injured, maimed, killed himself, someone else with an act like that.”

All that’s objectivel­y true, of course.

But Morant doesn’t work in a place where such truth has any purchase. He works in Tennessee, where Republican legislator­s have dismantled so many safety regulation­s that only the fringiest gun rights — open carry for 18-year-olds is now on the menu — have yet to be enacted.

It’s unclear where Morant was when the latest video was shot. But if he was in the Grizzlies home state, his behavior was not only legal, it was arguably beyond reproach. Irresponsi­ble, reckless and dangerous are pillars of Tennessee firearms laws, which allow state residents, no matter how untrained or unfit, to be armed at all times. If Morant purchased his gun from a private seller without a background check, well, that’s fine in Tennessee, too.

The state laws get results. Tennessee had one of the highest gun fatality rates in the nation, at 22.8 per 100,000 residents in 2021, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The comparable figure for the state of New York was 5.4.

There’s no prohibitio­n on dancing with a deadly partner in your car, either. Since 2014, anyone in Tennessee legally permitted to possess a gun can keep a loaded handgun, shotgun or rifle in a car or truck. “It’s essentiall­y an extension of the ‘castle doctrine,’ that you can defend your ‘castle,’ ” said Republican state Sen. Mike Bell, who sponsored the legislatio­n.

Tennessee legislator­s didn’t just extend your castle to your car, they extended it clear across the state by adopting permitless carry, open or concealed, and a standyour-ground law that removes the duty to retreat before using deadly force in selfdefens­e — or at least what the surviving gunman claims to have been self-defense.

As the Giffords Law Center notes, the state’s laws “also make it harder to properly investigat­e these cases by limiting law enforcemen­t’s ability to arrest someone who claims to have acted in self-defense.”

Tennessee is so eager to arm its citizens that even domestic abusers have a good shot at holding onto their guns, making it easier to continue terrorizin­g partners and families.

As ProPublica reported last month: Tennessee’s current gun dispossess­ion process has a significan­t and sometimes dangerous loophole, which kicks in after an abuser is ordered to give up their guns. While other states require guns to be turned over to law enforcemen­t, Tennessee allows someone to give their guns to a third party, like a friend or a relative.

There’s more. The state also has no mechanism to ensure that the gun is ever turned over to that third party.

In Tennessee, you can be known to be dangerousl­y violent and still keep your guns. Mayors of Tennessee cities have pleaded with the state to adopt rudimentar­y laws to make it harder for violent men to kill. The state responded by further loosening restrictio­ns.

Profession­al basketball makes heroes of exceptiona­lly talented young men like Morant. In return for gobs of money and arenas full of adulation, however, the NBA demands that certain standards of decency and decorum be upheld.

Silver said he thought Morant shared his concern about the potential damage that could flow from Morant’s public display of recklessne­ss, that “millions, if not tens of millions, of kids globally would see him as having done something that was celebratin­g” a casual disregard for human life.

The leadership of the NBA doesn’t want to glorify stupidity, recklessne­ss and violence. But the leadership of Tennessee does. Tennessee Republican­s enable all that — champion it — every day.

Morant was exercising his Tennessee right to be an armed fool and put lives, including his own, in danger.

Is there a problem with that?

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States