🧵Colorado Springs, hate, guns, and the sickness on the American Right. Yes, it has changed and here is a recent history
Prior to 2007, American gun culture was generally focused on hunting, target shooting, and self-defense. Here is a graph of gun sales over the last 20 years:
I was in the industry from '95-2020 and up until about 2006, while there certainly were a few "military type" or "assault" weapons sold, they were not the focus of the industry. In fact, the display & marketing of this "tactical" gear was frowned upon if not explicitly prohibited
The country's politics were much the same. From 1980 to 2007, there were dark corners, but Obama's win pushed the ugliness into the light. The NRA lead much of it, celebrating birtherism & conspiracy. The industry responded by welcoming companies who marketed directly to it all:
The Right & emerging gun culture sensed powerful symbiosis. Young men were told to be offensive culture warriors - just buy the gear of soldiers and adopt the politics of hate. By 2018, there were new gun companies with growth strategies centered on using guns "against the left"
And when that scene played out - and a young man dressed just like those guys in that ad and carried his guns just like the badass culture warriors, he was celebrated as a conquering hero by the Right and by the Gun Industry after killing two in Kenosha.
And of course, enterprising Trump acolytes, fans, and rivals saw the political advantage to ginning up the base. Some attack Jewish people (Tree of Life shooting), Some attack immigrants, (El Paso Walmart Shooting), and several attack the same community targeted in CO Springs:
Now our country has an obvious problem; creating/arming troubled culture warriors. Just like the Buffalo shooter who bought body armor & AR15 to use in battle against African Americans, the CO Springs Killer did the same against LBGTQ community.
These are not freak accidents.
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🧵Talking guns and responsibility during Thanksgiving holiday & not losing family/friends:
Many of us will encounter people over the holidays espousing irresponsible and dangerous positions on guns interwoven into authoritarian right-wing politics.
How to artfully unwind:
The Right has adopted absolute positions that doom reasonable conversation and that are unworkable in any democracy. You need to start by dismantling those absolute positions because no right or action in any functioning country is absolute.
Let's think of automobiles. There are a lot of rights wrapped up in our cars. Most of us enjoy the freedom to own one, the freedom to make a living with the aid of our cars etc. And so for many, cars are integral to our American life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness.
🧵
Trump just sent a message to his militia. This is another “stand back and stand by” like the one he sent before Jan 6 and the kind he sent with “good people on both sides”
This is thread on why Trump & the Authoritarian right are so reliant on guns and armed extremists
To understand the power of armed intimidation: Consider that you are at a dinner party with 9 friends waiting on the 10th. You have wine, discussion and even argument. But it’s civil. Those are your “rules.” But then the 10th shows up with a loaded AR15 strapped to his chest.
Your party is over. Your civility no longer rules. Only the opinion of the guy with a gun matters. You all go silent and he now dominates the room. He does not care about friendships or respect or if the next dinner will happen.
🧵
Anyone who thinks we are not dangerously close to armed political violence has not been paying attention to gun culture.
This is a thread about the normalization of armed insurrection in MAGA gun culture through one term seen in this popular gun meme:
"Voting from the rooftops" was once relegated to the dark alleys of gun culture. It means "if election does not go my way, I become a sniper." (this is a well-known pic of a guy advertising the idea)
the hat is a classical and very popular Greek reference: "come and take them"
"Rooftop" shooting entered gun culture after the Rodney King shooting in LA (1992). During the violence, store owners defended their property with guns (some from rooftops) and so was born the idea of guns on rooftops as necessary. The idea was married with voting soon after.
Tired of being trolled about gun terms? A thread to explain history/reality of "assault weapons," semiautomatic rifles, and related terminology:
First, "AR" (as in AR15) doesn't mean "assault rifle" it means "Armalite Rifle" (named for company that originally developed the gun.)
"Assault Rife" is term originally given military rifles meant to be used offensively to kill enemies at what many consider close/medium ranges (25-250 yards). Those guns generally include the capability for 3round burst and full-auto (in addition to most common semi-auto mode)
The American version was honed for lightweight, low recoil, high-capacity with a high-speed cartridge. Over years since military introduction in 60s, the guns have been improved to feed and function even better - and these improvements have been applied to all civilian versions
A thread on why second amendment absolutism is a frontline threat to democracy:
In the past few years, gun nuts have claimed that “shall not be infringed” literally means that no law of any sort can be enacted if it limits or slows the ability of anyone to get any weapon
This absolutist trend, started by the NRA’s “hell no” to any reasonable action like extending background checks after sandyhook, has grown into a movement of angry men who believe teenagers have the right to own high-cap AR15s and that open carry intimidation is a protected right
2A Absolutism is ludicrous on its face because these people live with restrictions every day. While many of them believe the second amendment’s sole purpose is to overthrow govt, none have seriously advocated legalizing civilian ownership of armed drones or nuclear weapons
Here's a thread for any Media folks - or any Americans who want to understand AR15s/gun terminology.
First - when reporters speak of AR15 and say "it's a high-powered rifle" well, the gun is powerful but relative to the average hunting gun is not that "high powered"
Most AR15s are chambered in .223/5.56, which is a relatively small rifle round. But it fires a small bullet (example- 55grain) very fast (about 3200feet per second). A small fast bullet does a lot of damage, especially at close ranges of about 250 yards or less.
By contrast, the typical hunting gun fires a much larger bullet (might be 200grains or more) some at similarly fast speeds. Those rifles are technically MUCH more powerful than an AR15. Hunting guns that fire those large bullets - lethal out to 1000 yards+ but fire more slowly.