The #NeverAgain Gun Control Movement is Too White

Daily Stormer
March 29, 2018

That’s what she said! 

What is the worst part about the #NeverAgain movement?

Is it that they’re trying to abolish the Second Amendment?

No.

Is it that they are just Jew-funded shills trying to disarm us so we have no means to defend ourselves against the brown horde?

No.

The biggest problem is that it is racist.

BBC:

Is the new movement against gun violence that is sweeping America too white and too rich?

It’s a question hotly debated on social media as hundreds of thousands rallied on Saturday in support of the #NeverAgain campaign that emerged after 17 people were killed in a gun attack at a high school in Parkland, Florida, last month.

Protesters are being accused of hypocrisy, as some ask why they didn’t turn out for the Black Lives Matter movement, which was set up in 2013 to end police violence against black people and highlight the impact of gun violence in ethnic minority communities.

In 2016 more than 52% of murder victims (73% killed by guns) in America were black, even though black people make up 13% of the population.

Debate on Twitter focused on a photograph of white protesters holding up their palms, which read: “Don’t shoot.” The slogan and gesture became a rallying cry in 2014 after 18-year-old Michael Brown, who was reported to be raising his arms, was fatally shot by a white police officer in Ferguson, Missouri.

Accusations that the weekend marches had appropriated the slogan were shared more than 3,000 times.

FACT.

A post shared by Blackout For Human Rights (@unitedblackout) on

“Where were y’all when black people were getting shot though? If gun control don’t include police and your protesting doesn’t include innocent black people, I do not want it!” tweeted @frankpuddles.

Race was also the subject of signs posted online with the Black Lives Matter hashtag.

Black Lives Matter activists posted on Instagram their stories from the march, focusing on the two movements working together.

Some critics suggested that Never Again has attracted so much attention because of the race and economic background of its founders, who are students at the Marjory Stoneman Douglas high school in Parkland.

“Families of black victims called for an end to violence, but that did not receive widespread media coverage. Black victims, whether victims of neighbourhood violence or otherwise, have not received the support that white victims have received,” said one Instagram user, referring to a picture of a man holding a sign reading: “Black students matter.”

The issue of perceived disparity in media attention was raised by Naomi Wadler, 11, at the March for Our Lives rally in Washington DC. She co-led a walkout from her school last week and said she represented black American girls ignored by the media and suffering from gun violence.

Never Again founder David Hogg also said black survivors in his school, where 25% of the pupils are black, had not received the same media platform as himself and other teenagers.

The reason black people are not at these protests is that they are not being bussed in as they are with Black Lives Matter protests. Because they know what happens when you bus in blacks to protest something. They know that these savages will literally set a city on fire at the drop of a hat.

The probability of a riot breaking out at a protest involving mainly blacks is 1.

“Gun control riots” is not a good look.

I have no idea why the BBC is pushing for this, but I hope the #NeverAgain organizers run with it.

Please, please black this thing up.

The other thing I’d like to see is Jews complaining about the appropriation of their “Never Again” Holocaust slogan.

Earlier this month, when the crisis actor children first came out with the slogan, some Jews were bothered.

Times of Israel:

Some supporters of the students’ efforts are put off by their use of Never Again. Lily Herman, writing in Refinery29, said that “it’s very uncomfortable to watch a term you’ve used to talk about your family and people’s own heritage and history be taken away overnight.”

Malka Goldberg, a digital communications specialist in Maryland, tweeted, “When I saw they’re using #NeverAgain for the campaign it bothered me, b/c many Jews strongly [associate] that phrase w/ the Holocaust specifically. For a second it felt like cultural appropriation, but I doubt the kids knew this or did it intentionally.”

But the kvetching has yet to kick into seventh gear.

Be great to see though.

The implication being: “The Holocaust is the only thing on earth that is not allowed to happen again. Other things, such as school shootings, are debatable – might need to happen again for some reason.”