Q: What is required to purchase a firearm in the state of Georgia?Show your (Georgia) driver's license, pass the background check, leave with your gun. Sigh.
A: You will need a valid state-issued ID.
But this one got me thinking:
Q: What is a public gathering?For 140 years, the "Public Gathering" law was used to disarm black Americans in Georgia. It was only repealed last month. Yowzer.
A: The Public Gathering Law was repealed when SB308 was signed into law on June 4, 2010. The Public Gathering was law in Georgia for 140 years and was one of the last Jim Crow laws to be repealed in Georgia.
Note that I'm not hatin' on Georgia, here. Reading through Georgia Carry's outstanding history Disarm the Negros: The Racist Roots of Gun Control made me think that Jim Crow is alive and well, and firmly ensconced on Massachusetts' Beacon Hill. You see, the gun violence in Dorchester, Roxbury, and other poor neighborhoods (read: majority black neighborhoods) is used to justify restricting firearms ownership in Massachusetts. Just like events like the Camilla Massacre was used to justify restricting (black) firearms ownership in 1868 Georgia. Hysterical stories sensationalized by a biased press try to whip up support for disarming Massachusetts citizens, just like in the 1906 Atlanta Race Riots.
And the Massachusetts law is applied selectively. If you live in Lincoln (a very white suburb of Boston, one with very low crime rates - IOW, one where you have less need for a gun to protect yourself), you'll have little trouble getting a permit. If you live in Dorchester (a majority black suburb of Boston, one with a very high crime rate - IOW, one where you have a lot more need for a gun), forget about it. Just like in 1908 Georgia. The analogy is not general, it's precise.
I mean, can't have a bunch of guns available to dangerous, excitable black folks, can you? [/sarcasm]
Massachusetts lefties, j'accuse. You are objectively racist, in a way that would have made the 1880 Georgia KKK proud. You should think long and hard about updating your laws - just like Georgia has. It is firmly to be hoped for that some day Massachusetts will grapple with its racist philosophy, and follow in Georgia's footsteps.
but, but, but.... Mass can't be a racist state.... its not in the Traditional South.....
ReplyDeleteHow did you ever pass your journolist license test.
(overheard at the State House:)
ReplyDelete"Did you read Borepatch's latest rant?"
"Yeah, I did."
"Whatcha think?"
"Well, he's now officially a rac..... ummmm.... hmmm... yeah, he ... uh... ok, I got it now. Since he mentioned Dorchester, he means... wait... uh... he wants to legally arm resident in a crime ridden suburb to defend themselves against... but the residents are... I'M SO CONFUSED!!!"
Burt, I think that the term that they're struggling for is "enemy of the State" ...
ReplyDeleteNo offense to you or JayG, et al, and I'm sure this doesn't apply to all Massachusettsians, but some of the most racist people I've come across in my life were Bostonians on several different occasions.
ReplyDeleteNo offense taken, T-Bolt, and you're absolutely right. Some of the racism is wrapped up in a sense of noblesse oblige towards the noble savage, but that doesn't make it any less offensive.
ReplyDelete