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Amid gun control debate, American minorities discuss uptick in firearm purchases: 'People are waking up'

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Leroy N. Soetoro

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Jun 4, 2022, 1:44:08 PM6/4/22
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https://www.foxnews.com/politics/minority-groups-discuss-uptick-firearm-
purchases-gun-control-debate

Firearm purchases by minority groups in America have soared over the past
few years and the debate surrounding gun control following a deadly school
shooting in Uvalde, Texas, late last month has seemingly renewed their
support for the Second Amendment.

Retailer surveys released by the National Shooting Sports Foundation
(NSFF) found that between 2019 and 2020 there was a 58% increase in
African Americans buying firearms, a 49% increase in Hispanic Americans
buying firearms, and a 43% increase in Asian Americans buying firearms.

In January, NSFF stated the numbers among first-time firearm buyers in
minority groups remained largely "unchanged" and that 18% of retailers
witnessed an increase in Native-Americans purchasing firearms in 2021,
while 14% of retailers saw an increase in Native-Hawaiian/Pacific
Islanders purchasing firearms in 2021.

Speaking to Fox News Digital outside the 2022 National Rifle Association
convention in Houston, Santee and Kel, both members of the NRA who reside
in Houston and only wanted to share their first names, said they attended
the event to see the "new firearms and to show support for the NRA and for
the whole 2A community."

Asked about the uptick in gun sales among certain minority groups in
America and why they believe that is, Shantee insisted she will do what is
necessary to protect herself and her family.

"For me, when I look at it, we're now understanding — African Americans,
minorities — are now understanding that basically it's on you to take care
of yourself, protect yourself," she said. "We're not new to crime, so we
want to make sure that we're protected. I think a lot more minorities are
taking their own protection in their own hands, which is great, because
the police cannot be there within seconds."

Noting the average time it takes for police to respond to certain
emergencies, Shantee asked, "In between that time, what are you doing?
What do we want to do? Are we gonna wait or fight back? I think a lot more
minorities are realizing, look, let's do this and let's do this the legal
way, and I think that's why you see this."

Kel said he believes minority groups in America are "becoming more aware
of situations" and, like Shantee, said you cannot always wait for
authorities to arrive if you are threatened.

"You've got to protect yourself," he said. "Make sure you protect your
home, not every time you can wait for the cops to come to your house. You
might be the victim … but if you protect yourself, you live another day.
That's how we see it."

Discussing recent gun control proposals offered by certain members in
Congress and pointing to protesters gathered outside the convention,
Shantee said, "For us, that doesn't help. A firearm isn't gonna pull the
trigger itself."

Shantee said she is unsure of why people are attacking the NRA or firearms
and insisted that neither Republicans nor Democrats are to blame for
shooting tragedies.

"We need to start looking at mental health, period," she said. "What is
going on with people to where they would do something like that? That's
not normal. If he would've left the firearm there he could've picked up
any other weapon to go into that school.… That individual chose to do
that."

With crime on the rise in major cities across America, Juan Ramireo, who
legally immigrated to America when he was 13 years old and traveled from
Arizona to Houston for the NRA convention, told Fox News Digital that he
is "blessed" to be able to legally defend himself should he need to.

"I'm blessed, really," Ramireo said. "I'm 29 now and I've lived here for
16 years. There's nothing like it anywhere. It's a great country and the
Second Amendment is a large reason as to why people feel safer here and in
their homes at night."

"As a kid, I knew what it was like to feel helpless. Nobody want[s] that
feeling. I saw my mom and grandmother go through several struggles and
feelings of fear in our small Mexican town. It was difficult. But after
moving here, it's a new world. I go to bed with no worry about defending
myself and my family."

Asked about the tragic shooting at Robb Elementary School in Uvalde that
left 19 children and two teachers dead and how it relates to his support
for the Second Amendment as a Hispanic, Ramireo said, "I send my prayers
to their families and I can't imagine the pain they go through now, but it
does not change my support for gun rights. I believe we need safer
schools. These people will do bad no matter the cost. Take that shooter
for instance, he was in a gun free zone and still did it. They always find
a way."

"What we have to do is find a way to stop them and do it," he added.
"We're failing kids for sure, but it's not because of gun laws. Criminals
break laws every day. We need school officers now and secured entrances.
As a Mexican immigrant, I feel that people are waking up. They realize
they need to protect themselves, their family, their children. Without the
right to protect ourselves, we struggle. I know that 'cause I've seen it
too many times."

In a speech on Thursday, President Biden said the Second Amendment is "not
absolute" and pleaded with Congress to pass what he considers
"commonsense" gun control legislation, including reinstating an assault
weapons ban, requiring background checks, and limiting magazine capacity.



--
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Under Barack Obama's leadership, the United States of America became the
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President Trump boosted the economy, reduced illegal invasions, appointed
dozens of judges and three SCOTUS justices.

Just Wondering

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Jun 4, 2022, 2:49:05 PM6/4/22
to
On 6/4/2022 11:44 AM, Leroy N. Soetoro wrote:
> https://www.foxnews.com/politics/minority-groups-discuss-uptick-firearm-
> purchases-gun-control-debate
>
> Firearm purchases by minority groups in America have soared over the past
> few years and the debate surrounding gun control following a deadly school
> shooting in Uvalde, Texas, late last month has seemingly renewed their
> support for the Second Amendment.
>
> Retailer surveys released by the National Shooting Sports Foundation
> (NSFF) found that between 2019 and 2020 there was a 58% increase in
> African Americans buying firearms, a 49% increase in Hispanic Americans
> buying firearms, and a 43% increase in Asian Americans buying firearms.
>
Good
>
> "What we have to do is find a way to stop them and do it," he added.
> "We're failing kids for sure, but it's not because of gun laws. Criminals
> break laws every day. We need school officers now and secured entrances.
> As a Mexican immigrant, I feel that people are waking up. They realize
> they need to protect themselves, their family, their children. Without the
> right to protect ourselves, we struggle. I know that 'cause I've seen it
> too many times."
>
Yes.

> In a speech on Thursday, President Biden said the Second Amendment is "not
> absolute" and pleaded with Congress to pass what he considers
> "commonsense" gun control legislation, including reinstating an assault
> weapons ban, requiring background checks, and limiting magazine capacity.
>
Not good. But Biden will discover his impotence yet again.

governo...@gmail.com

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Jun 4, 2022, 10:16:17 PM6/4/22
to
--
As journalists descend on Uvalde, as they did on Columbine,
Newtown, and Parkland,some are questioning whether a more
graphic approach is required to capture the reality of America’s
gun violence epidemic. "It’s time," suggests one industry leader,
"to show what a slaughtered 7-year-old looks like."
- Charlotte Klein in Vanity Fare 05/15/2022
https://www.gocomics.com/peanuts/1997/12/30

governo...@gmail.com

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Jun 4, 2022, 10:18:43 PM6/4/22
to
On Sat, 4 Jun 2022 12:49:03 -0600, Just Wondering <J...@jw.com> wrote:

>> In a speech on Thursday, President Biden said the Second Amendment is "not
>> absolute" and pleaded with Congress to pass what he considers
>> "commonsense" gun control legislation, including reinstating an assault
>> weapons ban, requiring background checks, and limiting magazine capacity.
>>
>Not good. But Biden will discover his impotence yet again.

I can't imagine he'll have any success. Skating to close to violating
the second is like skating to close to privatizing social security.
It's political suicide.

Voters will tell pollsters overwhelmingly that they support gun
controls and even bans of specific weapons or in specific situations,
but they won't actually vote for gun grabbers.

Swill

Scout

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Jun 13, 2022, 9:39:39 PM6/13/22
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"Just Wondering" <J...@jw.com> wrote in message
news:yONmK.42939$elob....@fx43.iad...
....until 2 minutes later when he forgets again.


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