Out of the Barrel of a Gun
By Charles
Homans
Photographs
by Mark Peterson
https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2021/01/26/magazine/armed-militia-movement-gun-laws.html
There are
400 million privately owned guns in America, by some estimates, and on Jan. 20,
2020, some 22,000 of their owners arrived at the State Capitol of Virginia, a
neoclassical building designed by Thomas Jefferson that sits on a rolling lawn
in the hilly center of downtown Richmond. The occasion was Lobby Day, a recent
tradition in Virginia, held annually on Martin Luther King’s Birthday, on which
citizen groups come to the Capitol to directly air their concerns to their
representatives in the State Legislature. The concerns of the gun owners, who
were assembled by an organization called the Virginia Citizens Defense League,
were in one sense specific: They were protesting a raft of firearms-related
bills the Legislature’s new Democratic majority was taking up that would
tighten the state’s generally permissive gun laws. Seventy-eight counties in
the state, making up the near-entirety of its rural areas, had declared
themselves “Second Amendment sanctuaries,” according to the V.C.D.L.
This was
enough to attract the attention of the Oath Keepers, a national militia group
that draws its membership from current and former military, law-enforcement
personnel and first responders. In December 2019, the Oath Keepers issued a
statement calling for “boots on the ground” in Virginia, accusing Gov. Ralph
Northam and “oath-breaking politicians in the State Legislature” of violating
the Second Amendment and warning of the prospect of his deploying the state’s
National Guard against the sanctuary counties. Stewart Rhodes, the group’s
founder, vowed “an ongoing campaign/deployment,” assisting sheriffs in the
state’s dissenting counties in forming officially recognized local militias,
directly lobbying military and law-enforcement members to refuse Northam’s
orders and providing tactical training to “EVERYONE in the county who is loyal
to the Constitution.”
As Lobby
Day approached, federal agents arrested three men suspected of ties to the
Base, a white-supremacist group, who said they were amassing weapons ahead of
the rally. Northam, citing intelligence that “suggests militia groups and hate
groups, some from out of state, plan to come to the Capitol to disrupt our
democratic process with acts of violence,” declared a state of emergency,
including a temporary ban on weapons in Capitol Square. The Virginia Citizens
Defense League’s president, Philip Van Cleave, told The Washington Post that he
hoped it would not become “another Charlottesville” — the 2017
white-supremacist rally that left one counterprotester dead — suggesting poor
police and state planning was to blame for what had transpired there. He told
militia members they were not needed to provide security; after all, he told
The Post, the rally would be not only heavily policed but also attended by
“enough citizens armed with handguns to take over a modern midsized country.”
Still, Van
Cleave did not dissuade the militia members from attending, and they did, by
the thousands. They threaded through the crowds on Ninth Street, along the
Capitol grounds, wearing tactical gear and carrying AR-15-style rifles. The
scene was dreamlike, the kind of thing that seemed at once impossible in
America and only possible in America, the only country in the world that
allowed private citizens to amass military-style weapons in such astounding
quantities while also reassuring itself that such an arsenal would never prove
politically consequential.
“Political
power grows out of the barrel of a gun,” Mao Zedong observed in 1938.
Americans, by contrast, have generally whistled past the full implications of
their own privately held arsenal, treating guns as an object of politics, not a
subject. This is partly a function of the country’s until recently unbroken
modern record of peaceful transfers of power. It is also a triumph of Second
Amendment activists’ messaging and their ability to successfully navigate that
message’s central paradox: that the right to bear arms is constitutionally
guaranteed because of the potential need to overthrow the same government that
codifies the right in the first place. Gun rights advocates have done this
mostly by confining their language with monotonous discipline to the fact and mythology
of the Revolutionary War, associating gun rights with heroism and patriotism
while also implicitly assuring that their exercise against the state is a
matter of deep history. George Washington knew what Mao knew, of course, but
his own revolution was an awfully long time ago.
The militia
movement — which flowered in the 1990s and began to resurge amid a general rise
in white-nationalist and antigovernment activity during Barack Obama’s
presidency — has always challenged the niceties of gun rights rhetoric.
Militias have stubbornly insisted that the government’s tyranny and their
rebellion against it are not theoretical but real, that politics can and should
be pursued not just on behalf of guns but by way of them. Nevertheless, in
their ’90s heyday it was possible to see them as an eccentric, if occasionally
violent, curiosity — especially for liberals ensconced in cities and suburbs
that, outside the Pacific Northwest, were mostly far removed from the prominent
theaters of militia activity. “To a Bostonian, they are a remote irritation
with no visible impact on mainstream media, culture or politics,” the Boston
Globe columnist Jeff Jacoby told the journalist David A. Neiwert in “In God’s
Country,” his 1999 book about the militia movement.
The militias’
massed appearance at last year’s Lobby Day, a large-scale muster in a midsize
city not far off the Acela corridor, was in this way a revelation. It was also
the logical product of a decade in which the boundaries between the mainstream
and the fringe had collapsed within both the gun rights movement and the
Republican Party, at the same time the boundaries between the movement and the
party had themselves collapsed. Though nonviolent, it was not so much a
demonstration in the usual sense as it was an unsubtle show of force. The
military-style rifles paraded alongside banners for Donald Trump — a president
who would soon be intimating his intentions to reject an unfriendly outcome of
the presidential election — suggested that one of America’s two major parties
was, in effect, acquiring an armed adjunct, like Hezbollah or the old Sinn
Fein.
The
militias’ massed appearance at last year’s Lobby Day, a large-scale muster in a
midsize city not far off the Acela corridor, was in this way a revelation. It
was also the logical product of a decade in which the boundaries between the
mainstream and the fringe had collapsed within both the gun rights movement and
the Republican Party, at the same time the boundaries between the movement and
the party had themselves collapsed. Though nonviolent, it was not so much a
demonstration in the usual sense as it was an unsubtle show of force. The
military-style rifles paraded alongside banners for Donald Trump — a president
who would soon be intimating his intentions to reject an unfriendly outcome of
the presidential election — suggested that one of America’s two major parties
was, in effect, acquiring an armed adjunct, like Hezbollah or the old Sinn
Fein.
Four months
later, the state government of Michigan closed the Capitol in Lansing after
protesters gathered outside, many of them armed, including representatives of
several local militias; in October, 13 members of a militia called the
Wolverine Watchmen were charged in relation to a plot to kidnap government
officials including Gov. Gretchen Whitmer on their belief that, according to
the F.B.I. complaint, she was “violating the U.S. Constitution.” In Oregon —
which briefly had to shut down its statehouse the previous year under threat
from militias — armed protesters angry over the state’s Covid-19 lockdown
orders descended on the Capitol in December. Security-camera footage later
revealed that a Republican legislator let them into the building.
The
pro-Trump mob that stormed the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6 included members of militia
networks that law enforcement and extremism researchers regard as significant;
members of the Oath Keepers and a group called the Ohio State Regular Militia
now face charges related to plotting a coordinated strike on the building,
possibly involving dozens of the rioters.
This year’s
Lobby Day would be less than two weeks after the Capitol attack, and caravans
of militiamen were expected to descend on the statehouse in Richmond.
Gun-control activists and sympathetic organizations had thwarted the Virginia
Citizens Defense League’s efforts to secure permits for a demonstration by
reserving them first. But in November, the group had announced that its members
still intended to converge on the Capitol complex in rolling caravans, and on
My Militia, an online forum for militia groups, members discussed joining: “We
need to get behind this one in great numbers,” one wrote, “and spread the
word.” (...)


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