The NRA steadfastly maintains that the 30,000 gun-related deaths
and 300,000 assaults with firearms in the United States every year
are a small price to pay to guarantee freedom. As former NRA
President Charlton Heston put it, "freedom isn't free."
And when gun enthusiasts talk about Constitutional liberties
guaranteed by the Second Amendment, they are referring to freedom
in a general sense, but they also have something more specific in
mind—freedom from government oppression. They argue that the only
way to keep federal authority in check is to arm individual
citizens who can, if necessary, defend themselves from an
aggressive government. In the past decade, this view of the proper
relationship between government and individual rights and the
insistence on a role for private violence in a democracy has been
co-opted by the conservative movement. As a result, it has spread
beyond extreme "militia" groups to influence state and national
policy.
In Guns, Democracy, and the Insurrectionist Idea, Josh Horwitz and
Casey Anderson reveal that the proponents of this view base their
argument on a deliberate misreading of history. The Insurrectionist
myth has been forged by twisting the facts of the American
Revolution and the founding of the United States, the denial of
civil rights to African-Americans after the Civil War, and the rise
of the Third Reich under Adolf Hitler. Here, Horwitz and Anderson
set the record straight. Then, challenging the proposition that
more guns equal more freedom, they expose Insurrectionism—not
government oppression—as the true threat to freedom in the U.S.
today.