(ThyBlackMan.com) After yet another mass shooting made headlines recently — this time, at a bank in Louisville, Kentucky — the chief medical officer for University of Louisville Health gained national attention as he shared his emotional thoughts on the regular toll gun violence takes. As Dr. Jason Smith spoke at a press conference to give an update on the victims’ conditions, he said: “For 15 years, I’ve cared for victims of violence and gunshot wounds. And people say, ‘I’m tired,’ but it’s more than tired. I’m weary. There’s only so many times you can walk into a room and tell someone, ‘They’re not coming home tomorrow.’ And it just breaks your heart when you hear someone screaming ‘Mommy,’ or ‘Daddy.’ It just becomes too hard day in and day out to be able to do that. My team is fantastic. They’re absolute professionals. They’re wonderful. But sooner or later, it catches up to everybody. You just can’t keep doing what we’re doing. … You can’t keep seeing all the people with these horrific injuries coming through the door without doing something to try and help. And I don’t know what the answer is. I’m a doctor. I don’t know what the answer is. But to everyone who helps make policy, both state and federal, I would simply ask you to do something. Because doing nothing, which is what we’ve been doing, is not working.”
Dr. Smith’s voice is one more in the overwhelming chorus urging elected leaders to do something to stem our national gun violence epidemic. In Tennessee, where three 9-year-olds and three adults were killed at the Covenant School on March 27, that cry became a roar as thousands of people, many of them high school and college students, descended on the state capitol in Nashville to demand lawmakers protect children instead of guns. The whole nation watched what happened next to three members of the state’s House of Representatives who were willing to listen. Reps. Gloria Johnson, Justin Jones and Justin Pearson stood with their constituents — and were quickly attacked by Republican peers in the state legislature, who then voted to expel Reps. Jones and Pearson from their elected positions.
When Rep. Johnson was asked why she thought she survived the expulsion vote but Reps. Jones and Pearson did not, she was candid: “Well, I think it’s pretty clear. I’m a 60-year-old white woman and they are two young Black men.” The same forces that stripped two young Black male legislators from elected office for standing up to entrenched power structures, standing with their voters, and standing against gun violence have been at work in Tennessee and across our nation for a very long time. But those forces have not had the last word.
The councils in Rep. Jones’ and Rep. Pearson’s districts who were asked to appoint temporary replacements for their positions both unanimously nominated Reps. Jones and Pearson to fill their own vacant seats. Both men were sworn in again this week, and both also plan to run again in the required special elections to fill them permanently. Rev. Janet Wolf, a longtime Children’s Defense Fund colleague, ally, and friend in Tennessee, was on the streets during the protests, inside the gallery during the votes to strip Reps. Jones and Pearson from office, and there to witness their return. As she sat through the attacks on the three representatives, she recognized the votes as part of continued attempts to undermine the power of voters in Knoxville, Memphis and Nashville. But in the protests and their aftermath she also felt hope.
Rev. Wolf saw firsthand how the young people surging on the state’s capitol represented an incredibly diverse range of backgrounds and local public and private schools, and could sense how the coalition in the streets marked a turning point. As one young woman told her, “I feel like I’m living history.” Rev. Wolf says for her and others in Tennessee who were young during the civil rights movement, seeing this generation ready to change things was a profound moment: “It was beautiful to see all of these young people and remember what it was like to feel that change was just around the corner — and to feel hopeful that systemic change is not only possible, it is happening.”
When Tennessee Gov. Bill Lee signed an executive order on Tuesday strengthening background checks for gun buyers and asked state lawmakers to do even more, it was just one sign that calls for change were being heard.
The young people and politicians and their supporters who are calling for more have no intention of giving up. They are committed to doing something, and their struggle should give all of us hope.
Written by Marian Wright Edelman
Official website; http://www.childrensdefense.org
The sad truth is that you will never be able to stop all weapon-related violence until a heart change takes place in people’s lives. Legislating “anti-gun” laws will NOT stop gun violence. Only a “heart transplant” aka “heart change”, spiritual re-birth, will stop gun violence. The Bible points out that while all people are born guilty of sin, the “natural man” is at enmity with God and that he cannot submit himself to God’s commands. So, until God changes the hearts, natural man will continue to murder people. When God changes the “heart of stone” into a “heart of flesh”, then we will see murder as well as other crimes, become lesser and lesser.
Why is it so hard for people to understand that Guns to do not killed people but evil people and racist people who live in fear and hatred of everything are the ones who use their legally purchase guns to killed inncoent people. You can use any tool, sport items or kitchen utensils to kills anyone such as a butter knife, searing knife, fork, hammer, wrench, tire iron, drill bits, baseball bat, bowling bat etc.. therefore are we going to asked our politicians to ban all utensils, tools and sports equipment.
You will never get rid of guns and make guns go away, because all Guns in America were created, fabricated, engineer and design by white people for white people to protect white people from black people. The first guns laws in America came after the end of slavery to take away the rifles and muskets away from the black union soldier just in case they ever decided to turn their guns onto the their former slave masters. Even during the black wall street massacre, the black were not allow to owned or have their guns to protect their wife, children, grandparents from the onslaught of crazy white men rampaging, killing, raping through the black wall street communities.
In addition during world war 1 and 2, the black soldiers who joined the United States Army were not allowed to carried rifles, be in the infantry, calvary etc.. except for been in the kitchen, supplies, drivers etc.. but when Japan and Germany starting kicking and killing white American soldiers in large numbers then our government starting thinking about putting black soldiers in the front line.
You have seen that guns is part of white American culture and it will never go away as long as their are black in America. Once racist America gets rid of all black men then it will be deemed appropriate to ban all guns. Indeed, the phobia of a black man walking down the streets of Ameria with his big private parts is what keeping and preventing the racist white lawmakers from eradicating and banning guns completely. Black people are like a nightmare to white people and guns are the only keeping the well endowed black man away from the insecure white men house.
You heard it, the white men of Ameria alongside his snow bunny and she devil white women are all infected with the disease of madness, insanity, insecurity, fear and the shortcoming of having small private parts. this fear and paranoia increases substantially with the birth of a black child every day since a new black baby is a new monster for white people and their guilty conscious.