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Preserve Gun Rights, Save Black Lives
Star Parker
RightBias.com
February 25, 2013
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This past Friday my organization, CURE, sponsored a press conference at the
National Press Club in Washington, to bring attention to the importance of
rigorously defending the right of all Americans, guaranteed under the 2nd
Amendment of our Constitution, to own a gun.
Our event provided a forum for black leaders from the world of politics and
public policy in Washington, from the business community, from academia, and
from the clergy to express their deep concern about efforts currently underway
to limit our God-given and constitutional individual right of self-defense.
Why would an organization like CURE, whose mission focuses on the relevance of
American values of faith and freedom to minorities, be so concerned about guns?
Because, as conservative black Americans, we know that the soul of America is
kept alive with the free flow of the oxygen of freedom. And we know that when
that flow is interrupted in any way, the group that suffers first and most are
blacks.
New gun control initiatives coming from our President and from Democrats in
congress to respond to a highly publicized tragedy by wanting to expand the
power of government and limit the freedom of citizens comes as no surprise.
There is no problem facing America today that liberals do not believe should be
solved by more government and less freedom. And liberals are consistent and
predictable in their indifference to facts and experience that show whenever
they do succeed in growing government and limiting freedom, they make matters
worse, not better.
A substantial body of research already shows that gun controls empower criminals
and weaken law-abiding citizens.
As John Lott, former chief economist of the US Sentencing Commission, recently
wrote in the Wall Street Journal, “With just a single exception, the attack in
Tucson last year, every public shooting in the U.S. in which three or more
people have been killed since at least 1950 have occurred in a place where
people are not allowed to carry their own firearms.”
Regarding black reality, blacks are the least armed, least protected and
defended, and the most assaulted citizens in our country.
According to a recent Pew Research Center survey, 42 percent of whites and 16
percent of blacks say that they have a pistol or rifle at home.
And, according to the Bureau of Justice Statistics, for the period 1980 to 2008,
“Blacks were six times more likely than whites to be homicide victims and eight
times more likely to commit a homicide.”
Law abiding black citizens live under siege in crime ridden urban centers.
Somehow they are supposed to buy the logic that giving more power to those in
law enforcement already charged with maintaining order but don’t, while
stripping down the freedoms of those that do obey the law, will make them better
off?
In a Pew Research Center survey in 2009, 46 percent of whites compared to 24
percent of blacks said they have a “great deal” of confidence in the local
police to enforce the law.
Can anyone whom God has blessed with a brain actually think that universal
background checks will keep guns out of the hands of gang thugs? Or that these
same checks, in which some past legal infraction might nullify a gun
application, will not result in even fewer urban law abiding blacks obtaining a
weapon for protection?
Perhaps even worse than another make-pretend big government “answer” that will
not only not solve a problem, but will make it worse, gun control initiatives
mask over the issues that really need attention.
A culture that devalues personal responsibility, that fosters government
dependence, that trashes traditional understanding of sex, marriage, and family,
and that bans these traditional values from our public schools and our public
life.
Americans of all backgrounds must fight yet another misguided liberal attempt to
undermine our personal freedom and sap the vitality of our nation.
Star Parker is founder and president of CURE, the Center for Urban Renewal
and Education, a 501c3 think tank which explores and promotes market based
public policy to fight poverty, as well as author of the newly revised Uncle
Sam's Plantation: How Big Government Enslaves America's Poor and What We Can do
About It.
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