Posted on 06/10/2014 7:10:14 AM PDT by grundle
The liberals at National Public Radio cant really imagine guns being necessary for anything...unless perhaps its to keep Southern segregationists at bay.
On Thursday afternoons Tell Me More talk show, host Michel Martin brought on Charles Cobb, who wrote the book This Nonviolent Stuff'll Get You Killed: How Guns Made The Civil Rights Movement Possible. She called it a hiding in plain sight story and asked why he wrote the book:
COBB: I'm very conscious of the gaps in the history, and one important gap in the history and the portrayal of the movement is the role of guns in the movement. I worked in the South. I lived with families in the South. There was never a family I stayed with that didn't have a gun. I know from personal experience and the experiences of others that guns kept people alive, kept communities safe. And all you have to do to understand this is simply think of black people as human beings, and they're going to respond to terrorism the way anybody else would....
MARTIN: Why do you think we don't know more stories like this?
COBB: Well, I think because the story of black people in general and the civil rights movement in the United States is incompletely told. So there's a lot we don't know, and the movement, meaning the southern freedom movement, has become so defined. The narrative of the movement has become so defined by nonviolence that anything presented outside of that narrative framework really isn't paid much attention to. I like the quip that Julian Bond made when I was talking to him about this book. He told me that really, the way the public understands the civil rights movement can be boiled down to one sentence. Rosa sat down, Martin stood up, then the white folks saw the light and saved the day.
Tell Me More has been canceled, since NPR can't get enough stations to pick up its show devoted to minorities, so maybe that would explain the usual liberal caution being thrown to the wind here.
In this 12-and-a-half-minute segment, Martin called Cobb an "author, professor, and activist," but didn't explain more about his biography, that he worked with the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee, or that in 1976, he joined NPR as a reporter, focusing on coverage of Africa.
I’ve read that GCA 68 came to us because the Panthers were arming up and marching in the street with long guns.
NPR knows that gun control is racist.
That program has been chopped... somebody’s burning some bridges on their way out...
(NPR cuts staff...women and minorities hit hardest)
Sometimes, it takes hardcore types of people getting the government’s attention — in order for reasonable ones to be listened to.
We got the 1968 GCA was four years of intensive MSM indoctrination after the murder of John Kennedy.
When Bobby Kennedy was murdered they went ballistic in anti-gun hysteria.
Go to your local library and go into the 1968 archive section of magazines like LIFE, LOOK, SATURDAY EVENING POST, and major newspapers of the time. You will see what hell the gun owners went through at that time.
With the passage of the 1968 GCA, anti-gunners got most of what they wanted which was a ban on the import of 5 shot bolt action army surplus rifles and surplus handguns, a ban on small foreign handguns, and the filling out of BATF forms and lots of small nitpicking rules.
They did not get federal registration of guns and they did not even ban the very handgun Bobby Kennedy was killed with.
After the 1968 GCA was passed the MSM began lobbying for the banning of small handguns, and then called for the ban on all handguns, then years later a ban on certain long guns.
Gun rights are central in the militant black nationalist manifestos from the 1950s-60s. Who knows whether it was to protect them from crackers or to arm up for revolution.
Thank you for that link.
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