May 25, 2022 | Reading Time: 5 minutes

Pro-gun is pro-white power

Ted Cruz understands that perfectly. You should, too.

Uvalde

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An 18-year-old gunman shot his grandmother in the face Tuesday in Uvalde, Texas, a majority Hispanic town west of San Antonio, before going to a local elementary school. He found a teacher and 19 fourth-graders in a classroom. He locked the door behind him. He shot them to pieces.


We should see these massacres less as acts of senseless violence and more as acts of political violence. It doesn’t matter whether the shooter is conscious of the forces working on him. What matters is that violence is the logical end of rightwing politics.


The shooter is dead. Police broke down the door and killed him. Salvador Ramos had been a student at Robb Elementary School, the site of the shooting. Not since Sandy Hook, nearly a decade ago, down the road from where I’m writing, have so many children been massacred.

Facts
Many facts are still being determined. Known is that Ramos legally purchased two semiautomatic rifles days before the rampage. One he left in his vehicle. The other he took with him. He wore a “tactical vest.” He left a backpack full of magazines at the entrance. Per the AP:

One of the guns was purchased at a federally licensed dealer in the Uvalde area on May 17, according to state Sen. John Whitmire. Ramos bought 375 rounds of ammunition the next day, then purchased the second rifle on May 20. On that day, an Instagram account appearing to belong to the gunman shared a photo of two AR-style rifles.

By Tuesday afternoon, Ted Cruz, US Senator from Texas, tweeted that he and wife Heidi were “fervently lifting up in prayer the children and families in the horrific shooting in Uvalde. We are in close contact with local officials, but the precise details are still unfolding. Thank you to heroic law enforcement & first responders for acting so swiftly.”

In response, Arizona Congressman Ruben Gallego, a Democrat, tweeted: “Just to be clear fuck you @tedcruz you fucking baby killer.”

Bait
Perhaps no one in the Congress represents “gun rights” more than Ted Cruz. In a Senate hearing held the week after another 18-year-old gunman shot to pieces 10 Black people on Buffalo’s eastside, Cruz accused his Democratic colleagues, who proposed a federal red-flag law, of trying to criminalize the conduct of “law-abiding citizens.” 

If the objective is to stop violent crime, what is effective is targeting actual violent criminals. The approach of today’s Senate Democrats is to try to go after the firearms of law-abiding citizens instead of targeting the violent criminals that are the real threat.

He said something similar last night on CNN:

Inevitably when there’s a murderer of this kind, you see politicians try to politicize it, you see Democrats and a lot of folks in the media whose immediate solution is to try to restrict the constitutional rights of law abiding citizens.

Switch
What Cruz is really saying, when he says pap like this, is that he and his party would rather have a debate over the Constitution, the Second Amendment and law. As long as we go along with that, they win. 

There has been no way forward on gun control, because the framing of the debate is usually deadlocked, as rights against rights – the right of citizens to safety and security, and the right of citizens to bear arms. 

Indeed, after Sandy Hook, the Republicans broke that apparent deadlock. The best means of security, they said, was more guns. GOP legislators loosened previous firearms restrictions “for safety’s sake.” Of course, in reality, they made guns more accessible to criminals.



Put another way, all this “law-abiding citizens” verbiage is bait. They don’t care about the fact that Ramos was a “law-abiding citizen,” as was Buffalo killer Payton Gendron, before turning to mass murder.

Don’t take the bait. 

Democracy’s betrayal
Instead, switch.

The debate we should be having, if liberals would stop nit-picking, is about democracy and, within that context, equal treatment under law. 

After the 2008 election, but especially after the 2012 election, the rightwing bloc of the Republican Party felt “betrayed” by democracy. After all, it created conditions by which voters elected a Black man. 

In their eyes, the rule of law can’t include equal treatment, because “the rule of law” was never equal. It was racialized. They’re right. “The rule of law,” for most of our history, was “rule by white power.”

To the rightwingers, that’s the natural order of things. That’s what God intended for these United States. Matter of fact, rule by white power is the superstructure of this constitutional republic. Barack Obama’s election turned these orders of sociopolitical power upside down. 

Suddenly, a Black man wasn’t solely subject to “the law.” Instead, he was enforcing it. Given that “the law” was never prosecuted equally but instead for the defense and protection of white power, you can see why rightwingers took “the rule of law” to mean “rule by a Black man.”

When democracy and the law are against you, what do you do?

You reach for a gun.

Violence is the goal
After Obama’s reelection, Republican governors and legislators began loosening previous firearms restrictions, allowing guns in churches, parks and other public spaces. The liberal reaction was befuddlement. After the bloodbath at Sandy Hook, what they were doing was insane!

Not to the rightwingers, though. After all, the sociopolitical orders of power that had once put them on top had been turned upside down. The oppressors had become the oppressed under this rule by a Black man. Expanding the range of guns was a way out of that predicament.

To restore the natural order – the rule of white power – they first needed to bring down the current one, to knock out its foundation. 

As a result, in the decade since the Sandy Hook massacre, this country has witnessed one mass murder after another. Liberals and gun-control advocates blamed the GOP, naturally. They also blamed the NRA and “gun lobby.” But they were missing two crucial elements. 

One, that to be for gun control is to be against white power. 



The rightwingers understand this perfectly. 

We should, too.

Two, that every massacre, even those with no apparent motive, is a reaction to democracy’s challenge to the natural order of things.

Slow-motion insurrection
Put this way, we can see them less as acts of senseless violence and more as acts of political violence. In this context, it doesn’t matter whether the shooter is conscious of the forces working on him. What matters is that violence is the logical end of rightwing politics.

Indeed, mass death works in the rightwingers’ favor whether it comes from bullets or a virus. When an electorate is scared enough, it will stop turning to democracy to solve problems. It will turn to the party that promises to restore “law and order,” that is, rule by white power.

They can’t win, though. 

They know it. 

The massacres are the proof.

If they thought they could win, the rightwingers would do what the Confederacy did — amass an army and invade. As it is, they contract out political violence. While standing against attempts to control the distribution of guns, they signal to wildcat paramilitaries that the time has come to “take their country back” and fight for their “freedom.”

Instead of attacking the government, a battle they can’t win, these paramilitaries hit “soft targets” like schools, churches and grocery stores. When seen outside the context of political violence, the attacks seem random, meaningless. But inside, they look like an insurrection.

Because that’s what it is.

They understand, perfectly
There is a straight line between Obama’s election, Sandy Hook, the election of Donald Trump, the J6 insurrection and Tuesday’s bloodbath in Uvalde. Salvador Ramos wasn’t white, but he probably wanted to be. To be white is to be in power. To not be white is to be subject to power.

What better way is there for a nonwhite man to become white than by purchasing a gun and committing acts of political violence, against Hispanic children who will benefit from democracy and equal treatment under law, for the purpose of restoring the natural order?

This setting is where the gun-control debate should be located. Not in the Second Amendment. Not in the Constitution. Instead, in the larger context of democracy, law and white power. To be pro-gun control is to be anti-white power. Ted Cruz and the GOP understand, perfectly.

We should, too.


John Stoehr is the editor of the Editorial Board. He writes the daily edition. Find him @johnastoehr.

2 Comments

  1. Joe Adams on May 25, 2022 at 2:57 pm

    I agree that the window dressing is white power, but the real benefit is profit, pure and simple profit. For the past 20 years, gun sales go up every time there’s a slaughter. Take the profit out of these slaughters and they’ll fade away like the smoke from a menthol cigarette.

    If we can take the profit and the political corruption out of gun violence, it would dissipate to an Australian level of violence and white power. The Seventh Amendment should be as strong as the Second Amendment. Let a jury see the crime scene photos and decide how much liability the manufacturer and retailer have in selling their products to an unstable 18-year-old boy. Expose them to the damages their products produce, which have been estimated at $280 billion. Once that takes effect, manufacturers will beg for background checks and safe harbor, but it means repealing the legal shield they currently enjoy.

    #UvaldeMassacre #SeventhAmendment

    https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7369030/

  2. Brian Murray on June 5, 2022 at 6:57 pm

    I heard you this morning on Boston College radio [WZBC, 90.3 FM] and just had to sign up to support your editorial board blog. The connecting thread connecting all the outrageous and violent actions of individuals and the government – the police in particular, is “white power” as you so ably demonstrated. All these police shootings of unarmed black men are perfect examples of your thesis. It’s so obvious once you outlined how “white power” permeates all of our society.
    Of course, this country has been a violent country and society since 1619. It started out as a criminal, thuggish society, and while those dark elements appear to be covered up, this psychopathic behavior is in the DNA of the country.
    But connecting all these wet dreams the rabid right dream of – putting women back into the home producing babies, elimination of Row v Wade, the continued lynching of black men [and women], via bullets and a heavy knee on the neck, and mass shootings seemingly every day, are instances of “white power” as you demonstrated.
    Thank you for your analysis = it’s very helpful towards a better understanding of who we are.

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