Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Nashville shooting shows what Second Amendment was not meant to protect

- LZ Granderson LZ Granderson is a columnist for the Los Angeles Times.

SToday’s gun law critics play whatabouti­sm with proposals, highlighti­ng suggested restrictio­ns that would not have prevented some other mass shooting. It’s as if the goal were legislativ­e perfection as opposed to saving as many lives as possible.

andy Hook is the mass shooting I hear mentioned most often when people talk about the moment they knew nothing would change. A madman murdered 26 people — most of them 6 or 7 years old — and Congress was still unable to pass substantiv­e gun or mental health legislatio­n. The assault weapons ban that Sen. Dianne Feinstein, D-calif., introduced in 2013 was defeated in the Senate with 15 Democrats siding with Republican­s in opposition — not that it mattered. Even if the yeas and nays ran down party lines, the measure would have been five short of passage.

For a lot of people, that vote 10 years ago was a clear sign that the National Rifle Associatio­n and the gun lobby had won. I believe that indication came 60 years ago with the assassinat­ion of President John F. Kennedy.

Consider this: In 1963, the president of the United States was murdered by someone who bought his rifle by mail for $12.78, and yet the piece of gun legislatio­n his death is credited with inspiring didn’t become law until five years later.

Just weeks after Kennedy’s death, Sen. Thomas Dodd, D-conn., introduced a bill to ban mail-order gun sales (among other restrictio­ns), and it got stuck in the Commerce Committee.

In its magazine, the NRA called the bill “irrational emotionali­sm.” It was in an earlier issue of the same magazine where Lee Harvey Oswald saw an ad for the gun he used to kill Kennedy.

There were other bills introduced, and they too fell short of the finish line. Kennedy’s assassinat­ion, as horrifying as it was, did not bring urgency.

Dodd had warned colleagues about the mail-order risk and growing gun violence as early as 1961. But elected officials spun in circles for five more years after Kennedy’s death while Malcolm X, the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. and Sen. Robert Kennedy were all gunned down.

If it weren’t for the Black Panther Party, Dodd’s cause might never have made it out of committee. However, after armed members of the group entered the Capitol in Sacramento in 1967 to protest a bill restrictin­g open carry, the winds shifted in California.

“There’s no reason why on the street today a citizen should be carrying loaded weapons,” then-gov. Ronald Reagan said at the time, adding that it was a “ridiculous way to solve problems that have to be solved among people of good will.”

After President Kennedy was murdered, the debate continued for years.

Yet after the Black Panthers issued a statement in 1967 — which read in part, “The Second Amendment of the Constituti­on of the United States gives us a right to bear arms. We therefore believe that all Black people should arm themselves for self-defense” — there was gun control in California that same year. And the next year, Dodd’s near 10-year effort was rewarded with national legislatio­n against mail-order gun sales.

As Carol Anderson points out in her book “The Second: Race and Guns in a Fatally

Unequal America,” it wasn’t the death of Kennedy that got the NRA to allow gun control in California. It was the sight of armed Black men.

Don’t get mad at me. I’m just the messenger. The message is the 130 mass shootings so far in 2023.

Not every mass shooting is the same. What motivated the assailant in Nashville appears to be different from what motivated the attacker in Monterey Park, which was different from Pulse, which was different from Sandy Hook.

Today’s gun law critics play whatabouti­sm with proposals, highlighti­ng suggested restrictio­ns that would not have prevented some other mass shooting. It’s as if the goal were legislativ­e perfection as opposed to saving as many lives as possible.

Meanwhile, the number of families that have become part of a group that no one wants to join, continues to grow nonetheles­s.

Yet, it’s because the membership continues to grow that those elected officials — the ones who only have thoughts and prayers to offer in moments like this, the ones who see gun debates as a fundraisin­g opportunit­y, the ones hoping the NRA hands them a gold star — are running out of places to hide.

I’m sure 60 years ago there were parts of America that felt untouched by the nation’s brewing gun violence. Yes, there were high-profile assassinat­ions on TV, but Malcolm X, King and the Kennedys were all murdered in big cities. Surely, there isn’t a problem with gun violence in a place like … Newtown.

Or a college campus in Michigan.

A store in El Paso.

Churches and synagogues.

This cannot be the kind of freedom the Second Amendment was intended to protect.

This cannot be the version of freedom members of Congress want to leave behind for young people to grow up in and make sense of. Keeping track of how many young people have been shot and killed isn’t freedom.

It’s frightenin­g.

 ?? GEORGE WALKER IV / THE TENNESSEAN VIA ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Protesters demonstrat­e Thursday during a rally of Rally of Parents and Kids to End Gun Violence at the State Capitol in Nashville, Tenn.
GEORGE WALKER IV / THE TENNESSEAN VIA ASSOCIATED PRESS Protesters demonstrat­e Thursday during a rally of Rally of Parents and Kids to End Gun Violence at the State Capitol in Nashville, Tenn.

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