In his latest attempt to equate the civil rights movement with gun rights, Rush Limbaugh during his Friday’s radio show questioned how civil rights leaders would have had to march for rights if they had greater access to firearms at the time.
Limbaugh kicked off the tirade by equating gun control activists with Bull Connor, a strong supporter of racial segregation who infamously ordered the use of fire hoses and police dogs against civil rights protesters. “So those of you who are not mobilizing to change the Second Amendment, those of you who are not mobilizing to make it more difficult to get guns and weapons are the modern equivalent of people who sat around and let Bull Connor turn his dogs loose on the marches at Selma,” he said.
He continued, “If a lot of African-Americans back in the ’60s had guns and the legal right to use them for self-defense, you think they would have needed Selma? I don’t know, I’m just asking.”
“If John Lewis, who says he was beat upside the head, if John Lewis had had a gun, would he have been beat upside the head on the bridge?” he asked.
John Lewis, now a congressman, was savagely beaten on “Bloody Sunday” during the 1965 Selma to Montgomery voting rights march. He had been committed to nonviolence protests before that incident and remained so afterwards.
Limbaugh was referencing comments made by Tom Brokaw on Thursday’s edition of Morning Joe. In a panel discussion on media culture and gun violence, which also included Rev. Al Sharpton and Richard Haass of the Council of Foreign Relations, Brokaw criticized the cultural inaction against gun violence to silence on segregation.
“Good people stayed in their houses and didn’t speak up when there was carnage in the streets and the total violation of a fundamental rights of African-Americans as they marched in Selma, and they let Bull Connor and the redneck elements of the South and the Klan take over their culture in effect and become of face of it. And now a lot of people who I know who grew up during that time have deep regrets about not speaking out,” said Brokaw.
The consensus of the panel’s conversation following Brokaw’s comments was that reasonable gun owners shouldn’t be afraid to speak up in favor of moderate regulation just as moderate First Amendment advocates shouldn’t be afraid to consider reasonable regulations on violent video games and other media.
Watch the exchange for yourself:









