An all-Black group is arming itself and demanding change. They are the NFAC
When two loud bangs rang out on the streets of Lafayette, Louisiana, no one knew where the gunshots came from as protesters gathered to demand justice for another Black man killed by police.
www.cnn.com
Straight off the back, I am not for this. I do not like this one bit.
Not because I don't believe Blacks don't have the same right to defend themselves as whites. As a firearm owner, of course that goes contrary to my beliefs. I'm more worried about the engrained racism that is in the hearts of people who don't even know they have it. Those same people who don't bat an eye for dealing with a customer before me and talking about how they both can't wait for their children to shoot (and some do already off the record), but are taken aback to see me there and are honestly confused as to why I'd need to defend myself.
I'm worried about the Boogaloo Bois and their ilk who are so turned on by a race war that they will commit acts in hopes of igniting one.
I'm worried about the members of the NFAC themselves. Because for every 9999 members who just want their children to be safe, there will be one that should have never be welcomed into the group, and they will mar the image of the NFAC if left unchecked. And yes, Black groups have to deal with that, but the Police, the Government, and Majority Society get to toss their hundreds of thousands of bad apples over their shoulders and tell everyone it doesn't mean anything.
There are obviously people even in this very forum that won't see that the NFAC formed from a need to feel the same protection as White America enjoys, and will go through their bias. I invite you to. You just give the NFAC more validity. But as a general rule, I want to see less militias than more, even if I'd be in the group's good graces.
The only good thing I see from this is that America will crack down on militias. And not just black Militias in attempt to seem just worried about the social need for these groups. Think of how Gun Control was developed after Huey B. Freeman's Black Panthers demonstrated their constitutional right to bear arms.