Even before we became the American we know today, guns were always part of American culture. In the colonial era and in the wild west, guns were an important part of survival. They need to kill animals as food and prevent unnecessary intruders and predators. However, in modern times, there are institutions such as Hannaford and organized police system, so guns have changed from necessities to novelty toys. In most cases, people have guns for sports reasons this century or they protect their families and their families from invasion.
Definitely, as with many other laws, gun control has been used to suppress African Americans, in the majority of US history. The southern has long forbidden slaves and free blacks to possess guns. But in the north, at the end of the Civil War, the Allies forces all sorts of soldiers to bring their rifles back home. Even blacks who are not serving can purchase guns in the north for excessive weapons that occurred during the war. President Lincoln promised "a free new life", but many black people know that white southern will not easily give up such a vision. As a freelancer in Louisiana state, "I will say to all soldiers of colored tribes" Bring your guns home. "
Historical records provide convincing evidence that racial discrimination is not a subtle way of being the basis of the gun control law. In most parts of America's history, gun control was publicly expressed as a way to 'black people' and 'his people' instead of them as well as softening the white ethnic fear. The purpose of this paper is to briefly summarize this evil gun control and racist alliance, the gun control law should be considered a "suspicious idea", and the "suspicious classification" discrimination theory It became part of the United States. Legal system
Gun control is a matter of racial discrimination. In 2015, 60% of African Americans thought that gun control should be given priority over gun rights, but 61% of whites have priority over gun control of gun rights We thought that it should be. Racist discriminatory history of gun control is comparable to the history of some African-Americans who believe they have the right to use weapons as civil rights issues. Even after a horrible large-scale shooting across the country over the past two decades, the support for black-American gun control has declined. Indeed, since the massacre of the AME church in Charleston, France, the support for the black gun has increased.