Florida Deputy Indicted for Killing Jermaine McBean

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Seems like right to carry laws don't apply to Black people in these supposedly "pro-gun" states.....

I assure, you this is going to keep on happening. A pellet gun....smh, and the officers were rewarded for their bravery?

:dahell:

You're 100% right breh. Gun laws were created in America to disarm black people.

http://www.thecoli.com/threads/disarm-the-negros-the-racist-roots-of-georgias-gun-laws.314070/

The Early Days – The First Gun Bans
From the founding days of Georgia, whites had a great fear of armed blacks rebelling against white power and privilege. In 1739, eighty slaves from Stono, South Carolina rebelled and killed twenty-five whites before they were defeated in a pitched battle by a better armed white militia. In August 1831, Nat Turner and seventy slaves and freedmen traveled from house to house through Southampton County, Virginia axing and beating to death all of the whites that they could find, including women and children. 57 white men, women and children were murdered during Turner’s two day killing spree.

The General Assembly responded to Nat Turner’s Slave Rebellion by enacting harsh laws limiting the rights of free blacks in Georgia and prohibiting the entry of free blacks from other states. Prior to this time, slaves and free blacks were allowed to have firearms during the weekdays when they had the permission of their owner or guardian. Slave children were often provided a gun and were tasked to shoot birds and other vermin on the plantation. Those practices ended when the General Assembly passed Georgia’s first gun ban. The 1833 law provided that “it shall not be lawful for any free person of colour in this state, to own, use, or carry fire arms of any description whatever.” The penalty was thirty-nine lashes and the firearm was to be sold and the proceeds given to the Justice of the Peace, akin to today’s Magistrate. In 1846, the Georgia Supreme Court held in Nunn v State that there was a constitutional right to carry a pistol openly in Georgia. Then two years later, the Georgia Supreme Court clarified in Cooper and Worsham v. Savannah that this right did not extend to free blacks. The court proclaimed that "Free persons of color have never been recognized here as citizens; they are not entitled to bear arms, vote for members of the legislature, or to hold any civil office."This ruling would form the basis for the expulsion of black legislators in 1868.
 

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Wonder how pro-gun white America would be if black people starting really arming themselves en masse :mjpls:

They'd be as pro-gun as the NRA was when the Panthers ran up on the courthouse steps :officerpls:

796b0a5fae2c2dd5f83bbb9b646d3403.jpg


Mulford Act - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 

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