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rug

(82,333 posts)
Tue Jan 5, 2016, 07:45 PM Jan 2016

How Obama Made Gun Control A Religious Freedom Issue

By Sarah Posner / January 5, 2016

In announcing new executive action to more rigorously enforce requirements for background checks to purchase guns, President Obama today called for balancing the rights of gun owners with other constitutional rights. “Second Amendment rights are important,” Obama said, “but there are other rights that we care about as well. And we have to be able to balance them.” He then enumerated cases of gun violence in places of worship and people murdered with guns because of their faith. We have a “right to worship freely and safely,” Obama said, and “that right was denied to Christians in Charleston, South Carolina. And that was denied Jews in Kansas City. And that was denied Muslims in Chapel Hill, and Sikhs in Oak Creek. They had rights, too.”

Hearing that list, again, of people targeted because of their faith, or targeted in a religious setting, was stunning and sobering, all over again, even if you remembered, in the back of your mind, that gruesome map of gun-related deaths, with an overlay of religious motivation. And it was a smart stroke of politic rhetoric, too: hey, listen, is your right to own a gun so sacrosanct that it trumps other rights, particularly the religious freedom rights many conservatives (selectively) champion?

Standing behind the president was Lucia McBath, whose son Jordan was shot dead in a car in Jacksonville, Florida, in 2012. McBath, the subject of the riveting 2015 film The Armor of Light, described to me in an interview last year how her own faith drove her to take on political advocacy for gun control after Jordan’s death. The film documents her friendship with the Rev. Rob Schenck, the religious right activist who has taken on a solitary battle to persuade his fellow white evangelicals that the Second Amendment isn’t scripture, that guns are not holy, and that the Bible doesn’t sanction arming yourself against your fellow citizens.

The film’s chronicle of McBath’s devastating loss and her newfound friendship with Schenck is moving, particularly in how it highlights both a racial and religious divide on guns. It is evident that McBath’s experiences as a black woman, and as a mother whose son was murdered by a white man who claimed to be angry at the volume of music in a car occupied by young black men, have shaped Schenck’s thinking in important ways. He acknowledged to me the racial fears of many of his white evangelical brethren, as well as the ways in which gun ownership is woven into their culture, even if they can’t articulate specific biblical support for it.

http://religiondispatches.org/how-obama-made-gun-control-a-religious-freedom-issue/

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How Obama Made Gun Control A Religious Freedom Issue (Original Post) rug Jan 2016 OP
Unitarian Universalists were murdered too LiberalEsto Jan 2016 #1
 

LiberalEsto

(22,845 posts)
1. Unitarian Universalists were murdered too
Tue Jan 5, 2016, 09:13 PM
Jan 2016

July 27, 2008, Two adults killed and seven wounded at the Tennessee Valley Unitarian Universalist Church in Knoxville, Tennessee. Motivated by a desire to kill liberals and Democrats, gunman Jim David Adkisson fired a shotgun at members of the congregation during a youth performance of a musical.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Knoxville_Unitarian_Universalist_church_shooting

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