FLASHBACK: When MLK Wanted to Protect His Family, He Was Denied His Second Amendment Rights
Martin Luther King, Jr. preached non-violence during the Civil Rights-era battles for racial equality.
But part of King's struggle also reminds us of the importance of the Second Amendment.
In 2011, UCLA law professor Adam Winkler observed, “Most people think King would be the last person to own a gun. Yet in the mid-1950s, as the civil rights movement heated up, King kept firearms for self-protection. In fact, he even applied for a permit to carry a concealed weapon.”
“A recipient of constant death threats, King had armed supporters take turns guarding his home and family,” Winkler noted. “He had good reason to fear that the Klan in Alabama was targeting him for assassination.”
On Jan. 30, 1956, King’s Montgomery, Alabama home was bombed by terrorists. Thankfully his wife and daughter were not harmed in the explosion. King responded, “My intimidations are a small price to pay if victory can be won.”
Still, King had the practical matter at hand of protecting his family.
Winkler would add of King's experience (emphasis added):
(A)fter King's house was bombed, King applied for a concealed carry permit in Alabama. The local police had discretion to determine who was a suitable person to carry firearms. King, a clergyman whose life was threatened daily, surely met the requirements of the law, but he was rejected nevertheless. At the time, the police used any wiggle room in the law to discriminate against African Americans.
King was denied his Second Amendment rights, among so many other basic rights.
Reason’s Damon Root wrote in 2011, “There's nothing unusual about this. Many civil rights activists - including those who publicly engaged in non-violent forms of resistance - kept guns for self-defense…”
The head of the North Carolina NAACP in the late 1940s, Robert F. Williams, famously stockpiled weapons to protect his community from the Ku Klux Klan.
“John R. Salter, one of the organizers of the famous 1963 sit-ins against segregated lunch counters in Jackson, Mississippi, said he always ‘traveled armed’ while working as a civil rights organizer in the South,” Root notes.
"I’m alive today because of the Second Amendment and the natural right to keep and bear arms,” Salter said.