When the Supreme Court Forces You to Admit That Gun Control is Racist
This video, presented by William Kirk, President of Washington Gun Law, critically examines the historical underpinnings of gun control in the United States. Kirk argues that historical attempts to regulate firearms, often framed as measures against 'dangerous persons,' were fundamentally rooted in racism, citing numerous examples from colonial and antebellum periods targeting Black individuals and Native Americans. He contends that the Supreme Court's Bruen decision, which requires historical analogs for gun control laws, exposes this racist foundation, forcing gun control advocates to confront the origins of their arguments.










